33.
Traunnovelle
box 5/7
ee e ee ee enen e
he Republi- [In the State s bann##e
heeler case.
But, my dear
of the earth.
allty, love of
ish humility.
Announcing the Publication of
er, greedy for
r, have thrust
was a genuine
and salient
been used for
AHPSUE
ople who have
glish-speaking
A Dream Novel—by
s at least as
of conscience
Puritan. He
omn right to
SCWTZLER
ose who think
ngs, even his
ssionately that
titled to a like
is right. And
compel these
AFTER a ball a Viennese physi¬
and rigliteous
44 cian lives over again, in cumu¬
lative magic, the whole circle of the
Grendon cites
loves he might have had. Ladies and
rthe English
prostitutes lure him with the intoxi¬
ness of power
cation of adventure, liberty and
htering men.
□
danger, sothat he almost forfeits his
g ferocity öf
own wife because of an infidelityshe
#of the Lord
Schnitzier
herself had dreamed.
an recall no
Butthe magical fantasy of tb# story fades before a nearer
pion of con¬
sof Switzer-
and more beautiful reality, All was a working of the im¬
agination, Schnitzler suggests that no dream is altogether
isylvania, the
a dream, and no reality completely real.
ts of Rhode
We believe“ Rhapsody“’,will furnish more exciting spec¬
heir troubles
r colonies on
ulation than any book that has appeared in a long time.
chusetts were
Price 81.50 at all Booksellers
a religious
the tyranny
Simon and Schuster, Inc. — Publishers
the godly as
37 West 57th Street
New Vork
ony, polsoned
Sompany, 1927.
5
Traunnovelle
box 5/7
ee e ee ee enen e
he Republi- [In the State s bann##e
heeler case.
But, my dear
of the earth.
allty, love of
ish humility.
Announcing the Publication of
er, greedy for
r, have thrust
was a genuine
and salient
been used for
AHPSUE
ople who have
glish-speaking
A Dream Novel—by
s at least as
of conscience
Puritan. He
omn right to
SCWTZLER
ose who think
ngs, even his
ssionately that
titled to a like
is right. And
compel these
AFTER a ball a Viennese physi¬
and rigliteous
44 cian lives over again, in cumu¬
lative magic, the whole circle of the
Grendon cites
loves he might have had. Ladies and
rthe English
prostitutes lure him with the intoxi¬
ness of power
cation of adventure, liberty and
htering men.
□
danger, sothat he almost forfeits his
g ferocity öf
own wife because of an infidelityshe
#of the Lord
Schnitzier
herself had dreamed.
an recall no
Butthe magical fantasy of tb# story fades before a nearer
pion of con¬
sof Switzer-
and more beautiful reality, All was a working of the im¬
agination, Schnitzler suggests that no dream is altogether
isylvania, the
a dream, and no reality completely real.
ts of Rhode
We believe“ Rhapsody“’,will furnish more exciting spec¬
heir troubles
r colonies on
ulation than any book that has appeared in a long time.
chusetts were
Price 81.50 at all Booksellers
a religious
the tyranny
Simon and Schuster, Inc. — Publishers
the godly as
37 West 57th Street
New Vork
ony, polsoned
Sompany, 1927.
5