top bar Arthur's Animated Logo


2500 Classic Novels

Free EText Stories

Search This Site


Home Page

Louisa May Alcott
Thomas B. Aldrich
Horatio Alger, Jr.
Jane Austen

R. M. Ballantyne

Honore de Balzac
Bronte Sisters
John Buchan
Frances H. Burnett

E. Rice Burroughs

Sir Richard Burton
Wilkie Collins
Joseph Conrad
Marie Corelli

James F. Cooper

Stephen Crane
F. Marian Crawford
Richard Harding Davis
Daniel Defoe

Charles Dickens
F. Dostoevsky

A. C. Doyle
Alexandre Dumas
George Eliot
Edna Ferber

F. Scott Fitzgerald

E. M. Forster
Mary E.W. Freeman
John Galsworthy
Elizabeth Gaskell

George Gissing

Maxim Gorky
Zane Grey
H. Rider Haggard
Thomas Hardy

Bret Harte

Nathaniel Hawthorne
Anthony Hope
Washington Irving
Henry James

Jerome K. Jerome
Rudyard Kipling

Old Sci-fi
Best Stories
Bahá'í Writings

Children's Stories

Wild West Stories
Northern Sagas
Various Books

Etext Sources

Horror Tales
Tales of Oz
Tom Swift Series


HWG Logo

 
top logo

Stories of James Fenimore Cooper

Best Stories| The Bible| Bahá'í | Children's Stories| Wild West
Northern Sagas | The Koran | Various Books | Etext Sources |
History| The Shadow| Horror Tales| Gothic Tales| Short Stories
Religions | Detectives | Fairy Tales | Islam | Mystery | Oz |
Women Authors | Boy's Own | American Tales| Frontier Days
hr

Free Novels!    No Registration!    
  • The Pathfinder   or   The Inland Sea
    The sublimity connected with vastness is familiar to every eye. The most abstruse, the most far-reaching, perhaps the most chastened of the poet's thoughts, crowd on the imagination as he gazes into the depths of the illimitable void. The expanse of the ocean is seldom seen by the novice with indifference; ... By letting in the light of heaven upon the dark and damp recesses of the wood, they form a sort of oases in the solemn obscurity of the virgin forests of America.
  • The Last of the Mohicans   A Narrative of 1757
    It was a feature peculiar to the colonial wars of North America, that the toils and dangers of the wilderness were to be encountered before the adverse hosts could meet. A wide and apparently an impervious boundary of forests severed the possessions of the hostile provinces of France and England. The hardy colonist, and the trained European who fought at his side, frequently expended months in struggling against the rapids of the streams, or in effecting the rugged passes of the mountains, in quest of an opportunity to exhibit their courage in a more martial conflict.
  • Deerslayer Volume I
    Our two adventurers had not far to go. Hurry knew the direction, as soon as he had found the open spot and the spring, and he now led on with the confident step of a man assured of his object. The forest was dark, as a matter of course, but it was no onger obstructed by under-brush, and the footing was firm and dry.
  • Deerslayer Volume II
    Chingachgook stepped upon the beach, and cautiously examined it, for some distance, on each side of the canoe. In order to do this, he was often obliged to wade to his knees in the lake, but no Hist rewarded his search.
  • Tales for Fifteen:  or  Imagination and Heart.
    So long as Anna Miller was the inmate of the school, Julia was satisfied to remain also, but the father of Anna having determined to remove to an estate in the interior of the country, his daughter was taken from school; and while the arrangements were making for the reception of the family on the banks of the Gennessee, Anna was permitted to taste, for a short time, the pleasures of the world, at the residence of Miss Emmerson on the banks of the Hudson.
  • The Pioneers  Or  The Sources of the Susquehanna
    Near the centre of the State of New York lies an extensive district of country whose surface is a succession of hills and dales, or, to speak with greater deference to geographical definitions, of mountains and valleys. It is among these hills that the Delaware takes its rise; and flowing from the limpid lakes and thousand springs of this region the numerous sources of the Susquehanna meander through the valleys until, uniting their streams, they form one of the proudest rivers of the United States.
  • Elinor Wyllys  Or The Young Folk Of Longbridge
    When was there ever an evening too warm for young people to dance! Elinor's friends had not been in the room half an hour, before they discovered that they were just the right number to make a quadrille agreeable.
  • The Spy   A Tale Of The Neutral Ground
    We would not be understood as throwing the gauntlet to our fair countrywomen, by whose opinions it is that we expect to stand or fall; we only mean to say, that if we have got no lords and castles in the book, it is because there are none in the country.
  • Precaution  James Fenimore Cooper
    While chatting with the doctor and his wife, Francis returned from his morning ride, and told them the Jarvis family had arrived; he had witnessed an unpleasant accident to a gig, in which were Captain Jarvis, and a friend, Colonel Egerton; it had been awkwardly driven in turning in the deanery gate, and upset:
  • The Prairie
    Much was said and written, at the time, concerning the policy of adding the vast regions of Louisiana, to the, already, immense and but half-tenanted territories of the United States. As the warmth of controversy, however, subsided, and personal considerations gave place to more liberal views, the wisdom of the measure began to be, generally, conceded.
  • Old Ironsides
    Congress now directed that the work on three of the six new frigates should be stopped, while the remainder were to be slowly completed. The three it was determined to complete were The States, Old Ironsides, and The Constellation. These three ships happened to be the most advanced, and the loss would be the heaviest by arresting the work on them.
  • The Lake Gun
    Several times did our traveler stop to gaze on that immovable form. A feeling of superstition came over him when he saw that not the smallest motion, nor relief of limb or attitude, was made for the ten minutes that his eye had rested on the singular and strange object.
  • The Eclipse
    I had scarcely returned to the family party, left on the watch, when one of my brothers, more vigilant, or with clearer sight than his companions, exclaimed that he clearly saw a dark line, drawn on the western margin of the sun's disc! All faces were instantly turned upwards, and through the glasses we could indeed now see a dusky, but distinct object, darkening the sun's light.
  • Autobiography of a Pocket-Handkerchief
    When the American enters on the history of his ancestors, he is driven, after some ten or twelve generations at most, to seek refuge in a country in Europe; whereas exactly the reverse is the case with us, our most remote extraction being American, while our more recent construction and education have taken place in Europe.
  • Wyandotte  0r The Hutted Knoll
    While it is true, then, that the mountainous region, which now contains the counties of Schoharie, Otsego, Chenango, Broome, Delaware, etc., was a wilderness in 1775, the colonial governors had begun to make grants of its lands, some twenty years earlier.
  • Jack Tier
    The river, as the well-known arm of the sea in which the Swash was lying is erroneously termed, was just at that moment unusually clear of craft, and not a sail, larger than that of a boat, was to be seen between the end of Blackwell's Island and Corlaer's Hook,
  • The Pilot
    To the utter amazement of every individual present, a small vessel was seen moving slowly round a point of land that formed one of the sides of the little bay, to which the field the labourers were in composed the other. There was something very peculiar in the externals of this unusual visiter
 
Flags image


Pages Updated On: 1-August- MMIII
Copyright © MMI -- MMIII   ArthursClassicNovels.com

 
top bar Arthur's Animated Logo


Online Education

Toronto Streets

Home Page

D.H.Lawrence
Jack London
George MacDonald
Captain F. Marryat
Herman Melville

L. M. Montgomery

William Morris
H. H. Munro (Saki)
Kathleen Norris
Phillips Oppenheim

Baroness Orczy

Stories of O Henry
Gilbert Parker
Elia W. Peattie
Edgar Allan Poe

Charles Reade

Mary Roberts Rinehart
Rafael Sabatini
Sir Walter Scott
George. B. Shaw

William G. Simms
Bronte Sisters

R.L.Stevenson
Booth Tarkington
William M. Thackeray
Leo Tolstoy

Anthony Trollope

Ivan Turgenev
Mark Twain
Henry van Dyke
Jules Verne

H.G.Wells

Edith Wharton
Stewart E. White
Kate Douglas Wiggin
Oscar Wilde

P. G. Wodehouse
Charlotte M. Yonge

For History Lovers
Gothic Tales
Stories by Women
Short Stories

Detective Stories
Religious Material

Fairy Tales
Mystery Stories
Boy's Own
Frontier Days

American Tales
The Bible
The Koran
Writings of Islam

Sponsored by the ETEXT Archives



The Shadow Knows

Baen Free Library
Baen Free Library