For Sale: The Life and Correspondence of Thomas Arnold DD.. (2 volumes), digitally scanned copy.

19,June, 2009

For Sale: The Life and Correspondence of Thomas Arnold DD.. (2 volumes), digitally scanned copy.

The Life and Correspondence of Thomas Arnold DD.. (2 volumes). This is a scanned copy of the original book containing both searchable text and the original graphics. It is provided as an Adobe Acrobat PDF file, you can search for names, places and items which may not be in the index.

This eBook can be Purchased:
  • on CD by Post from my online shop (http://www.majesticmole.com) at £5.99 (free postage anywhere in the world)
  • or at a reduced price (£4) as a downloadable PDF eBook from lulu.com (lulu is a leading publisher of online books) or from my online shop http://www.majesticmole.com).

If purchased for postal delivery the file(s) are provided on a CD. Ships from the UK. Posted 1st Class. Air Mail outside UK. You will receive confirmation email on dispatch.

There are 837 pages total in the original book in 2 volumes. There is one PDF file, in black and white. 004334.pdf. This is the main body of the book. This file is approximately 104MB. Sample: You can examine a sample of the book in PDF form here.

Author: Arthur Penrhyn Stanley (December 13, 1815 – July 18, 1881), was an English churchman, dean of Westminster, and known as Dean Stanley. (See Wikipedia)

Published: JOHN MURRAY, ALBEMARLE STREET, 1880.

This is a scanned copy of the original book containing both searchable text and the original graphics. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. The text interpretation by optical scanning of the document may not be a precise interpretation of the written text. Users should refer to the scanned image to validate the interpretation of the material. Every effort is made to check the supplied material for viruses. It is always wise for you to run an anti-virus program on all material accessed by a computer system. We cannot accept any responsibility for any loss, disruption or damage to your data or your computer system which may occur whilst using the supplied material.This eBook is provided as a searchable PDF document (Acrobat format Document) and so you can search for names, places and items many of which are not indexed in the normal index. The Adobe™ Acrobat™ (.pdf) format requires the FREE Adobe™ Acrobat™ Reader . Download and installation instructions for the Adobe™ Acrobat™ Reader are on the Adobe™ website. This reader allows the viewing and printing of the book.

Description: Language: English Thomas Arnold (June 13, 1795 – June 12, 1842) was a British schoolmaster and historian, head of Rugby School from 1828 to 1841. (source wikipedia) Arnold was born on the Isle of Wight, the son of William Arnold, an inland revenue officer, and his wife Martha de la Field. He was educated at Winchester and Corpus Christi College, Oxford. There he excelled at Classics and was made a fellow of Oriel in 1815. His appointment to the headship of Rugby, the famous public school, after some years as a tutor, turned the school’s fortunes around, and his force of character and religious zeal enabled him to turn it into a model followed by the other public schools, exercising an unprecedented influence on the educational system of the country. He is portrayed as a leading character in the novel, Tom Brown’s Schooldays.

He was involved in many controversies, educational and religious. As a churchman he was a decided Erastian, and strongly opposed to the High Church party. In 1841, he was appointed Regius Professor of Modern History at Oxford. His 1833 Principles of Church Reform is associated with the beginnings of the Broad Church movement.[1] He was also one of the Eminent Victorians in Lytton Strachey’s book of that name. His chief literary works are his unfinished History of Rome (three volumes 1838-42), and his Lectures on Modern History. He died suddenly of angina pectoris in the midst of his growing influence. His biography, Life of Arnold, by Arthur Penrhyn Stanley, one of Arnold’s former pupils, is considered one of the best works of its class in the language.

Extracted from preface: The sources from which this work has been drawn have necessarily been exceedingly various. It was in fact originally intended that the several parts should have been supplied by different writers, as in the instance of the valuable contribution which, in addition to his kind assistance throughout, has been furnished to the earlier part by Mr. Justice Coleridge; and although, in its present shape, the responsibility of arranging and executing it has fallen upon one person, yet it should still be clearly understood how largely I have availed myself of the aid of others, in order to supply the defects of my own personal knowledge of Dr. Arnold’s life and character, which was confined to the intercourse I enjoyed with him, first as his pupil at Rugby, from 1829 to 1834, and thenceforward, on more familiar terms, to the end of his life. To his family, I feel that the fewest words will best express my sense, both of the confidence which they reposed in me by entrusting to my care so precious a charge, and of the manifold kindness with which they have assisted me, as none others could. To the many attached friends of his earlier years, the occurrence of whose names in the following pages makes it unnecessary
to mention them more particularly here, I would also take this opportunity of expressing my deep obligations, not only for the readiness with which they have given me access to all letters and information that I could require, but still more for the active interest which they have taken in lightening my responsibility and labour, and for the careful and most valuable criticism to which some of them have allowed me to subject the whole or the greater part of this work. Lastly, his pupils will perceive the unsparing use I have made of their numerous contributions. I had at one time thought of indicating the various distinct authorities from which the chapter on his ” School Life at Rugby ” has been compiled, but I found that this would be impracticable. The names of some of those who have most aided me will be found in the Correspondence. To those many others, who are not there mentioned- and may I here be allowed more especially to name my younger schoolfellows, with whom I have become acquainted chiefly through the means of this work, and whose recollections, as being the most recent and the most lively, have been amongst the most valuable that I have received-I would here express my warmest thanks for the more than assistance which they have rendered me. Great as has been the anxiety and difficulty of this undertaking, it has been relieved by nothing so much as the assurance which I have received through their co-operation, that I was not mistaken in the estimate I had formed of our common friend and master, and that the influence of his teaching and example continues and will continue to produce the fruits which he would most have desired to see. The Correspondence has been selected from the mass of letters preserved, in many cases, in almost unbroken series from first to last. One large class- those to the parents of his pupils-I have been unable to procure, and possibly they could not have been made available for the present work. Another numerous body of letters-those which were addressed to scientific or literary men on questions connected with his edition of Thucydides or his History,-I have omitted, partly as thinking them too minute to occupy space wanted for subjects of more general importance; partly because their substance or their results have for the most part been incorporated into his published works. To those which appear in the present collection, something of a fragmentary character has been imparted by the necessary omission, wherever it was possible, of repetitions, such as must necessarily occur in letters written to different persons at the same time, -of allusions which would have been painful to living individuals,-of domestic details, which, however characteristic, could not have been published without a greater infringement on privacy than is yet possible,- of passages which, without further explanation than could be given, would certainly have been misunderstood. Still, enough remains to give in his own words, and in his own manner, what he thought and felt on the subjects of most interest to him. And though the mode of expression must be judged by the relation in which he stood to those whom he addressed, and with the usual and just allowance for the familiarity and unreservedness of epistolary intercourse, yet, on the whole, the Letters represent (except where they correct themselves) what those who knew him best believe to have been his deliberate convictions and his habitual feelings. The object of the Narrative has been to state so much as would enable the reader to enter upon the Letters with a correct understanding of their writer in his different periods of life, and his different spheres of action. In all cases where it was possible, his opinions and plans have been given in his own words, and in no case, whether in speaking of what he did or intended to do, from mere conjecture of my own or of any one else. Wherever the Narrative has gone into greater detail, as in the chapter on his ” School Life at Rugby,” it has been where the Letters were comparatively silent, and where details alone would give to those who were most concerned a true representation of his views and actions.

Other books, maps, eBooks can also be bought at: my personal web site for eBooks and genealogical materials http://www.majesticmole.com
at lulu.com for downloadble eBooks.

Keywords: Genealogy, Family History, history, eBook, Book, for sale, antique, rare, out of print, scanned, digital copy, PDF, majesticmole, youpublish.com, majesticmole.com, lulu.com, biblio.com, downloadable, research, reference, Correspondence, Thomas Arnold, Arthur Penrhyn Stanley, dean of Westminster, Dean Stanley, schoolmaster, historian, Rugby School, Isle of Wight, William Arnold, Corpus Christi, Erastian, Broad Church, Justice Coleridge

Copyright © 2007-2009 Martin Ferrier. You can take copies only for the purpose of backups.
This page created 29/12/2008.

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On Demand Digital Scanning of books

25,February, 2009

On Demand Digital Scanning

 

I have many books which are out of copyright, which I have yet to scan in and make available for sale. Below is a list of some of them. If you would like to purchase a scanned copy of any of the books then please send to me an email with the book title and reference number. I will scan the book in and make it available on my personal web site  http://www.majesticmole.com  and on lulu.com for you to purchase as a downloadable copy. I will send you an email when it is ready.  Normally the cost would be £5.99 (post free anywhere in the world) to purchase on a CD, or £4 as a downloadable copy, in this case there will be a 25% discount for the first week the book is listed. You will be able to see a extracted sample of the scaned book before purchasing. Digital books are provided as  Acrobat format Documents which have been OCR’ed (Optical character reading) and hence are searchable.  The Adobe™ Acrobat™ (.pdf) format requires the FREE Adobe™ Acrobat™ Reader  (http://www.adobe.com/products/acrobat/readstep2.html).  Download and installation instructions are on the Adobe™ website.This reader allows the viewing and printing of the book. 

You can see the books I have already scanned and are for sale at my personal web site http://www.majesticmole.com and at lulu.com for downloadable copies of my eBooks.

 

Click on the title to see a copy of the title page.

Book Title Reference Number
Companion to the Calendars 1825 A list of all the changes in the administration from the commencement of the present century to which are prefixed lists of the last and present parliaments shewing the changes made by the late general election. 004542
La Belgique Sanglante (French) 004548
Raphaels Book of Fate
 The Book of Fate: whereby all questions may be answered respecting the present and future. By Raphael. Publisher/year pp. 180. W. Foulsham & Co.: London, 1886. Raphael is pseudonym for Robert Thomas Cross (1850-1923) – notable astrologer, better known as Raphael
004104
Riders British Merlin 1825 Notes on Husbandry, Fairs, Marts and Tables 004541
The Adventures of Mr Verdant Green, an Oxford Freshman  by Cuthbert Bede a psuedonym for Edward BRADLEY (M: 1827 Mar 25 – 1889 Dec 12) 004539
The recollections of Geoffry Hamlyn
(c1894) first published 1859. by Henry KINGSLEY (M: 1830 Jan 2 – 1876 May 24), Clement (King) SHORTER (M: 1857 Jul 19 – 1926 Nov 19) and Railton, Herbert (1857–1910), illustrator
004547
Theological Introduction to the Thirty – Nine Articles of the Church of England.
 1929 by Prof, Edward John BICKNELL (M: 1882 – 1934 Jan 1)
001389
La Revue des Revues Volume 8 1894 1894 by Jean FINOT (M: 1856 – 1922 Apr 25) (French) 004546
Corot Materpieces in Colour Corot, Jean-Baptiste-Camille, 1796-1875 Author:  Sidney Allnutt (1874-1931)Illustrated with eight reproductions in colour. Publisher pp. 79. T. C. & E. C. Jack: London; F. A. Stokes Co.: New York 003910
British Butterflies 1905 W.S.Coleman British Butterflies. Figures and descriptions of every native species, with an account of butterfly development … With illustrations by the author. COLEMAN, William Stephen. (British, 1829-1904)  Born Horsham Sussex 003513
After the war A Diary by Repington, Charles À Court (1858–1925), army officer and military writer. Commander of the order of Leopold, officer of the Legion of Honour. First published 1922. 003598
The Chronicles of England, France, Spain  Originally published Froissart, J., Chronicles of England, France, and the adjoining countries, from the latter part of the reign of Edward II to the coronation of Henry IV, éd. T. Johnes, 5 tomes, S.l., Hafod Press, 1803-1810 004509
A Travers le Midi (French)  La Vallee de la Garonne par Eugène Trutat (25th August 1840 – 6th August 1910) was a French naturalist, mountaineer, geologist and photographer, who was curator of the Museum of Toulouse. He began taking photographs in 1859, and produced almost 15,000 over the course of the next fifty years, covering a wide range of topics. source wikipedia 004536
Memoirs of the Comtesse de Boigne
 (1781-1814) edited from the original MS by M.Charles Nicoullaud. Boigne, Charlotte Louise Eléonore Adelaide de Le Borgne, Comtesse  de Boigne. Publisher: William Heinemann, 1907. Charles Nicoullaud (1854 – 1925) source Openlibrary.org.
004508
The works of Thomas Chalmers Vol 5. Prof, Thomas CHALMERS (M: 1780 Mar 17 (or 13) – 1847 May 30)  vol. 5, Sketches of moral and mental philosophy … 004561
The history and antiquities of Horsham … Second edition.
 … Second edition. (1889) Author: HURST, Dorothea Eliza. aged 71 in 1891 living in Horsham, bn Chichester, death 1900 Horsham
004554
Historical View of the Progress of Discovery on the more Northern Coasts of America (1832) 004563
The Lyle Family Genealogy by Oscar Kennett LYLE, # Birth: 1839 in St Louis, St Louis Co., MO, died 29/1/1917
004560
The life of William Ewart Gladstone 2 vols (of a 3 volume set) (1872-1898) published 1908 by John MORLEY, 1st Viscount MORLEY of Blackburn (M: 1838 Dec 24 – 1923 Sep 23)   004551
Handel Author: Charles Francis Abdy WILLIAMS (M: 1855 – 1923 Feb 27) 003943
Biology (1908) Robert John Harvey Gibson,  2/11/1860-3/6/1929 (Glasgow) | dean, Faculty of Science, University of Liverpool 000265
Original Plays (W.S.Gilbert) 1876, Sir William Schwenck Gilbert[1] (18 November 1836–29 May 1911) 004557
The life of Robert Burns by Lockhart, J. G, / ed. John H. Ingram. (1890) Lockhart, J. G. (John Gibson), 1794-1854. edited by Ingram, John Henry, 1842-1916. 004556
The Leisure Hour (1886) 003939
The Morning watches and Night Watches 004552
Petersons Magazine 1870 PUBLISHED PHILADELPHIA 004558
Poetical works of Lord Byron (1878) 004555
The present Peerage of the united Kingdom 1825 + Stockdales Peerage for 1825 + stockdales baronetage 1825 with the arms of the peers and a list of the second titles. The established order of precdency 004543

Other books, maps, eBooks already scanned in can be bought at:

Digital books are provided as  Acrobat format Documents and hence are searchable.  The Adobe™ Acrobat™ (.pdf) format requires the FREE Adobe™ Acrobat™ Reader  (http://www.adobe.com/products/acrobat/readstep2.html).  Download and installation instructions are on the Adobe™ website.This reader allows the viewing and printing of the book. 


Rambles in Bible Lands (1894) 251pp

11,August, 2008

TITLE

Rambles in Bible Lands (1894) 251pp
This is a scanned copy of the original book containing both searchable text and the original graphics. It is provided as an Adobe Acrobat PDF file, you can search for names, places and items which may not be in the index. It can also be purchased at a reduced price from lulu.com as a downloadable PDF eBook.

AUTHOR

Rev. Richard Newton. (1813 – 1887)

PUBLISHED

GALL AND INGLIS, 25 PATERNOSTER SQUARE; London

DESCRIPTION

In the year 1870 it was my privilege to visit the Holy Land. Being then, as now, editor of the publications of the American Sunday-School Union, while journeying through that land a series of letters was written, both for The Sunday-School World and The Child’s World, giving an account of the interesting places visited there, in connection with the scenes referred to in the history of the Bible. These letters were continued after my return home, till all the places visited on that journey had been described. At the request of the Committee of Publication, those two series of letters have been combined together and thrown into the form of consecutive chapters, and so constitute, with considerable additional matter, the substance of the present volume. In preparing it, my hope has been that a book might thus be furnished that would be at once attractive to younger readers, and at the same time interesting and profitable to those of maturer years. If this hope should be realized in any good degree, I shall feel devoutly thankful.
British Museum Integrated Catalogue entry.

LANGUAGE: English

SAMPLE

You can examine a sample of the book in PDF form here.

PROVISION

This eBook is provided as a searchable PDF document (Acrobat format Document) and so you can search for names, places and items many of which are not indexed in the normal index. The Adobe™ Acrobat™ (.pdf) format requires the FREE Adobe™ Acrobat™ Reader . Download and installation instructions for the Adobe™ Acrobat™ Reader are on the Adobe™ website. This reader allows the viewing and printing of the book.
There are 251 pages in the original book. There is one PDF file, in black and white.003954.pdf. This is the main body of the book. This file is approximately 35MB.

This is a scanned copy of the original book containing both searchable text and the original graphics. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. The text interpretation by optical scanning of the document may not be a precise interpretation of the written text. Users should refer to the scanned image to validate the interpretation of the material.

DELIVERY

Inventory #003954. If purchased for postal delivery the file(s) are provided on a CD. Ships from the UK. Posted 1st Class. Air Mail outside UK. You will receive confirmation email on dispatch. It can also be purchased in downloadable form from lulu.com .

Other books, maps, eBooks can also be bought at:


© 2007,2008 Martin Ferrier. You can take copies only for the purpose of backups.
This page created 05/03/2008 last updated 05/03/2008.

NEWMAN’S APOLOGIA PRO VITA SUA 1913

11,August, 2008

TITLE

NEWMAN‘S APOLOGIA PRO VITA SUA 1913
This is a scanned copy of the original book containing both searchable text and the original graphics. It is provided as an Adobe Acrobat PDF file, you can search for names, places and items which may not be in the index. It can also be purchased at a reduced price from lulu.com as a downloadable PDF eBook.

AUTHOR

The Venerable John Henry Cardinal Newman, C.O. (February 21, 1801August 11, 1890) was an Anglican convert to Roman Catholicism, later made a cardinal, and in 1991 proclaimed ‘Venerable’. In early life he was a major figure in the Oxford Movement to bring the Church of England back to its Catholic roots. Eventually his studies in history persuaded him to become a Roman Catholic. Both before and after his conversion he wrote a number of influential books, including Via Media, Essay on the Development of Christian Doctrine, Apologia Pro Vita Sua, and the Grammar of Assent.

INTRODUCTION BY WILFRID WARD. Wilfrid Philip Ward (1856-1916) was an English essayist and biographer, born at Old Hall, Ware, a son of William George Ward. He attended St. Edmund’s College, Ware, Updhaw College, Durham, and Gregorian University, Rome, Italy. Afterward, he was occupied at educational institutions in Great Britain. He lectured at Lowell Institute, Boston in 1915. He edited the Dublin Review, contributed to publications such as the Edinburgh Review, Quarterly Review.

PUBLISHED

HENRY FROWDE, OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS, LONDON, EDINBURGH, GLASGOW, NEW YORK, TORONTO, MELBOURNE, BOMBAY, 1913

DESCRIPTION

NEWMAN’S, APOLOGIA PRO VITA SUA, THE TWO VERSIONS OF 1864 & 1865, PRECEDED BY, NEWMAN’S AND KINGSLEY’S PAMPHLETS, British Museum Integrated Catalogue entry.

THE public rightly regards the Apologia as the most typical and important of the writings of its author. In the first place, it is, in some ways, his most characteristic work. It is instinct with his personality. It is the best exhibition in Newman’s published writings of his curious absorption in the drama of his own life. It illustrates the gifts which his greatest enemies have not denied him—his ” regal ” English style, and his mastery of the methods of effective controversy. It has also special importance in the story of his career, for it marks the critical turning point of his fortunes in later life. When the Kingsley controversy began, Newman’s reputation and prospects were at their lowest ebb. He had, since joining the Catholic Church in 1845, been entirely hidden from the public eye, and it is hardly too much to say that the bulk of his fellow countrymen had almost forgotten his existence. He had devoted himself entirely to the duties of his position in his new communion. Yet his work for the Catholic Church had been inadequately appreciated by his co-religionists. The three most considerable enterprises he had undertaken—the Irish University, the translation of the Bible, and his editorship of the Rambler on lines which should enable English Catholics to take an effective share in the thought of the day—had all failed. By an influential group of extremists his orthodoxy was suspected, and they had done their best, not wholly without success, to make Rome itself share their suspicions. He was forgotten by the world at large; he was little esteemed by Catholics themselves. Kingsley’s attack gave him the opportunity for setting himself right alike with the larger public and with the smaller. The opportunity presented difficulties, but it offered a great prize. His chance lay in a battle against heavy odds. Kingsley was a widely popular writer. In accusing the Catholic priesthood of being equivocators and indifferent to truth, he had on his side the widespread prejudice of the English public of 1864. When he added to his original indictment a list of ” superstitious ” beliefs which Newman himself could not repudiate, he could count on still wider sympathy. But the encounter, though it presented great difficulties, offered, as I have said, a great opportunity. Kingsley’s popularity and notoriety would advertise a combat with him, and make it notorious ; thus it meant an excellent chance of gaining the attention of the world at large. Moreover Newman, if he defended the Catholic priesthood with conspicuous success, was sure to win, as their champion, quite a new position among his co-religionists.

LANGUAGE: English

SAMPLE

You can examine a sample of the book in PDF form here.

PROVISION

This eBook is provided as a searchable PDF document (Acrobat format Document) and so you can search for names, places and items many of which are not indexed in the normal index. The Adobe™ Acrobat™ (.pdf) format requires the FREE Adobe™ Acrobat™ Reader . Download and installation instructions for the Adobe™ Acrobat™ Reader are on the Adobe™ website. This reader allows the viewing and printing of the book.
There are 528 pages in the original book. There is one PDF file, in black and white. 003925.pdf. This is the main body of the book. This file is approximately 73MB.

This is a scanned copy of the original book containing both searchable text and the original graphics. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. The text interpretation by optical scanning of the document may not be a precise interpretation of the written text. Users should refer to the scanned image to validate the interpretation of the material.

DELIVERY

Inventory #003925. If purchased for postal delivery the file(s) are provided on a CD. Ships from the UK. Postage is free. Posted 1st Class. Air Mail outside UK. You will receive confirmation email on dispatch. It can be purchased from here in CD format for postage, and in downloadable form from lulu.com .

Other books, maps, eBooks can also be bought at:


© 2007,2008 Martin Ferrier. You can take copies only for the purpose of backups.
This page created 14/03/2008 last updated 14/03/2008.

Humanity and God [1904] 356pp

11,August, 2008

A book on a religious topic

TITLE

Humanity and God [1904] 356pp
This is a scanned copy of the original book containing both searchable text and the original graphics. It is provided as an Adobe Acrobat PDF file, you can search for names, places and items which may not be in the index. It can also be purchased at a reduced price from lulu.com as a downloadable PDF eBook.

AUTHOR

Rev. Samuel Chadwick, (-, 1932)  was born in the industrialized north of England in 1840 into a devout Methodist family. Ex President of the Wesleyan Methodist Conference. After a major awakening and deepening of his faith in his late twenties via a personal epiphany in which he burned all his early sermons, he moved on to larger congregations and greater popularity, ending his career as Principal of Cliff College, a Methodist lay training centre. (source wikipedia.com)

PUBLISHED

pp. xv. 356. Hodder & Stoughton: London, 1904

DESCRIPTION

These sermons are soul Stirring and work inspiring. Hundreds have received new courage and inspiration through the reading of these great sermons.

“The sermons selected were preached from notes as a series in the regular course of my ministry; and afterwards at the Southport Convention, and the Northfield Conference. That explains some omissions and some repetitions. An underlying unity runs through the series, yet each sermon had to be practically complete in itself.

I send forth these sermons deeply conscious of their limitations and imperfections. Two things comfort me—a sentence I read many years ago, ” A sharp spear needs no polish ” ; and the fact that every one of these sermons has been blessed of God to many souls. My only prayer concerning them is, that they may be blessed in print as they were blessed in speech, and that Christ’s Name may be glorified.”

LANGUAGE: English

SAMPLE

You can examine a sample of the book in PDF form here.

PROVISION

This eBook is provided as a searchable PDF document (Acrobat format Document) and so you can search for names, places and items many of which are not indexed in the normal index. The Adobe™ Acrobat™ (.pdf) format requires the FREE Adobe™ Acrobat™ Reader . Download and installation instructions for the Adobe™ Acrobat™ Reader are on the Adobe™ website. This reader allows the viewing and printing of the book.
There are 356 pages in the original book. There is one PDF file, in black and white.001821.pdf. This is the main body of the book. This file is approximately 35MB.

This is a scanned copy of the original book containing both searchable text and the original graphics. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. The text interpretation by optical scanning of the document may not be a precise interpretation of the written text. Users should refer to the scanned image to validate the interpretation of the material.

DELIVERY

Inventory #001821. If purchased for postal delivery the file(s) are provided on a CD. Ships from the UK. Posted 1st Class. Air Mail outside UK. You will receive confirmation email on dispatch. Please check out the postal costs before buying. It can be purchased from here in CD format for postage, and in downloadable form from lulu.com .

Other books, maps, eBooks can also be bought at:


© 2007,2008 Martin Ferrier. You can take copies only for the purpose of backups.
This page created 01/03/2008 last updated 27/08/2008.