Elizabeth Robins - Works

Works

As C. E. Raimond, she wrote:

  • George Mandeville's Husband, 1894
  • The New Moon, 1895
  • Below the Salt, 1896
  • The Open Question, 1898

The success of this last novel led to her publishing under her own name:

  • The Alaska-Klondike diary of Elizabeth Robins, 1900
  • The magnetic north, 1904
  • A Dark Lantern, 1905
  • The convert, 1907

Votes for Women! (A suffrage play produced at he Royal Court Theatre, Sloane Square, London), 1907.

  • Come and Find Me, 1908, a sequel to The magnetic north
  • Camilla, 1918
  • The Messenger, 1920
  • Ancilla's share : an indictment of sex antagonism, 1924

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Famous quotes containing the word works:

    The hippopotamus’s day
    Is passed in sleep; at night he hunts;
    God works in a mysterious way—
    The Church can sleep and feed at once.
    —T.S. (Thomas Stearns)

    The slightest living thing answers a deeper need than all the works of man because it is transitory. It has an evanescence of life, or growth, or change: it passes, as we do, from one stage to the another, from darkness to darkness, into a distance where we, too, vanish out of sight. A work of art is static; and its value and its weakness lie in being so: but the tuft of grass and the clouds above it belong to our own travelling brotherhood.
    Freya Stark (b. 1893–1993)

    I cannot spare water or wine, Tobacco-leaf, or poppy, or rose;
    From the earth-poles to the line, All between that works or grows,
    Every thing is kin of mine.
    Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803–1882)