
JAMES BRANCH CABELL
IN GRATITUDE AND AFFECTION
CHAPTER - A PREFACE - CRITICAL COMMENT - THE ARGUMENT - PART ONE—PERION - I HOW PERION WAS UNMASKED - II HOW THE VICOMTE WAS VERY GAY - III HOW MELICENT WOOED - IV HOW THE BISHOP AIDED PERION - V HOW MELICENT WEDDED - PART TWO—MELICENT - VI HOW MELICENT SOUGHT OVERSEA - VII HOW PERION WAS FREED - VIII HOW DEMETRIOS WAS AMUSED - IX HOW TIME SPED IN HEATHENRY - X HOW DEMETRIOS WOOED - PART THREE—DEMETRIOS - XI HOW TIME SPED WITH PERION - XII HOW DEMETRIOS WAS TAKEN - XIII HOW THEY PRAISED MELICENT - XIV HOW PERION BRAVED THEODORET. - XV HOW PERION FOUGHT - XVI HOW DEMETRIOS MEDITATED. - XVII HOW A MINSTREL CAME - XVIII HOW THEY CRIED QUITS - XIX HOW FLAMBERGE WAS LOST - XX HOW PERION GOT AID - PART FOUR—AHASUERUS - XXI HOW DEMETRIOS HELD HIS CHATTEL - XXII HOW MISERY HELD NACUMERA. - XXIII HOW DEMETRIOS CRIED FAREWELL - XXIV HOW ORESTES RULED - XXV HOW WOMEN TALKED TOGETHER - XXVI HOW MEN ORDERED MATTERS - XXVII HOW AHASUERUS WAS CANDID - XXVIII HOW PERION SAW MELICENT - XXIX HOW A BARGAIN WAS CRIED - XXX HOW MELICENT CONQUERED - THE AFTERWORD - BIBLIOGRAPHY
JOSEPH HERGESHEIMER. - CRITICAL COMMENT
—THOMAS UPCLIFFE.
THE ARGUMENT
—SIR WILLIAM ALLONBY. - THE ROMANCE OF LUSIGNAN OF THAT FORGOTTEN MAKER IN THE FRENCH TONGUE, MESSIRE NICOLAS DE CAEN. HERE BEGINS THE TALE WHICH THEY OF POICTESME NARRATE CONCERNING DAME MELICENT, THAT WAS DAUGHTER TO THE GREAT COUNT MANUEL. - PART ONE
PART TWO - MELICENT
PART THREE - DEMETRIOS
PART FOUR - AHASUERUS
Wikipedia page about this book: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Domnei:_A_Comedy_of_Woman-Worship
Language
en
Duration
~3 hours (204K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2006-01-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1879–1958
Best known for the witty and once-controversial novel Jurgen, this Richmond-born writer brought fantasy, satire, and sharp social comedy together in a style that made him a standout voice of the early 20th century. Admired by literary contemporaries such as H. L. Mencken and Sinclair Lewis, he wrote with elegance, irony, and a taste for the absurd.
View all books
by James Branch Cabell

by James Branch Cabell

by James Branch Cabell

by James Branch Cabell

by James Branch Cabell

by James Branch Cabell

by James Branch Cabell