"O Thou, My Austria!" [With ATOC]

"O Thou, My Austria!" [With ATOC]

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Overview

CONTENTS.


CHAPTER I.

A Manuscript Misappropriated.


CHAPTER II.

The Contents of the Manuscript.


CHAPTER III.

An Arrival.


CHAPTER IV.

A Quarrel.


CHAPTER V.

Baroness Paula.


CHAPTER VI.

Entrapped.


CHAPTER VII.

An Invitation.


CHAPTER VIII.

The Secret.


CHAPTER IX.

An Encounter.


CHAPTER X.

A Garrison Town.


CHAPTER XI.

An Old Friend.


CHAPTER XII.

A Graveyard in Paris.


CHAPTER XIII.

At Dobrotschau.


CHAPTER XIV.

Olga.


CHAPTER XV.

Comrades and Friends.


CHAPTER XVI.

Lato Treurenberg.


CHAPTER XVII.

Mismated.


CHAPTER XVIII.

A Friend's Advice.


CHAPTER XIX.

Frau Rosa's Birthday.


CHAPTER XX.

Komaritz Again.


CHAPTER XXI.

"Poor Lato!"


CHAPTER XXII.

Harry's Musings.


CHAPTER XXIII.

Zdena to the Rescue.


CHAPTER XXIV.

A Sleepless Night.


CHAPTER XXV.

The Confession.


CHAPTER XXVI.

The Baron's Aid.


CHAPTER XXVII.

Baron Franz.


CHAPTER XXVIII.

A Short Visit.


CHAPTER XXIX.

Submission.


CHAPTER XXX.

Persecution.


CHAPTER XXXI.

Consolation.


CHAPTER XXXII.

Interrupted Harmony.


CHAPTER XXXIII.

Early Sunrise.


CHAPTER XXXIV.

Struggles.


CHAPTER XXXV.

A Slanderer.


CHAPTER XXXVI.

Failure.


CHAPTER XXXVII.

A Visit.


CHAPTER XXXVIII.

At Last.


CHAPTER XXXIX.

The Dinner.


CHAPTER XL.

A Farewell.


CHAPTER XLI.

Resolve.


CHAPTER XLII.

Found.


CHAPTER XLIII.

Count Hans.


CHAPTER XLIV.

Spring.


CHAPTER XLV.

Old Baron Franz.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940013353312
Publisher: Ladislav Deczi
Publication date: 10/02/2011
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 625
File size: 756 KB

About the Author

Aloisia Kirschner (June 17, 1854 - February 10, 1934) was an Austrian novelist, born in Prague and favorably known under her pseudonym Ossip Schubin, which she borrowed from the novel Helena by Ivan Turgenev.
Brought up on her parent's estate at Lochkov, she afterward spent several winters in Brussels, Paris, and Rome, receiving there, undoubtedly, many inspirations for her clever descriptions of artistic Bohemianism and international fashionable society, which were her favorite themes. An uncommonly keen observer, her great gift for striking characterization, frequently seasoned with sarcasm, is especially apparent in her delineations of the military and artistic circles in Austria-Hungary.
She died in 1934 at Schloss Kosatek, Bohemia.
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