220 results
- Books
- Online
Reflections : the life and writings of a young blind woman in post-revolutionary France / Thérèse-Adèle Husson ; translated and with commentary by Catherine J. Kudlick and Zina Weygand.
Husson, Thérèse-Adèle, 1803-1831Date: 2003, ©2001- Books
Entre aveugles : conseils à l'usage des personnes qui viennent de perdre la vue / par Emile Javal.
Javal, Émile, 1839-1907.Date: 1903- Books
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The royal captive. A tragedy. By John Maxwell, being blind.
Maxwell, John, active 1740-1761.Date: 1745- Pictures
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André-Antoine Blancheton. Lithograph by A. Devéria.
Devéria, Achille, 1800-1857.Reference: 12031i- Books
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Essai sur la possibilité de faire écrire les aveugles : et de leur faire lire ce qu'ils auront écrit / Par A.-D.-J.-B. Challan et A.-M. Rousseau.
Challan, A. D. J. B. (Antoine Didier Jean Baptiste), 1754-1831.Date: 1824- Books
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A new tragedy: cali'd [sic], The distressed virgin. By John Maxwell, being blind.
Maxwell, John, active 1740-1761.Date: 1761- Books
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The faithful pair: or, virtue in Distress. A tragedy. By John Maxwell, being Blind.
Maxwell, John, active 1740-1761.Date: 1740- Books
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The polite assembly: or, the Charms of Solitude Display'd. By John Maxwell, being blind.
Maxwell, John, active 1740-1761.Date: 1757- Books
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A new tragedy, call'd, the loves of Prince Emilius and Lovisa. By John Maxwell, being blind.
Maxwell, John, active 1740-1761.Date: 1755- Books
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Annual report on the work of the authority : (with which is incorporated the annual report on the medical inspection and treatment of school children as required by the Board of Health) / Education Authority of Glasgow.
Education Authority of GlasgowDate: 1924- Books
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Farewell to London. A satirical poem. By N. Withy, the wandering bard. To which is now added, a love letter. Likewise, a song, adapted to the ingenious Mr. Shore, a blind boy of Dudley
Withy, N. (Nathan).Date: MDCCCX. [1790]- Books
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On the influence of artificial light in causing impaired vision, and on some methods of preventing, or lessening, its injurious action on the eye / by James Hunter.
Date: 1840- Books
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The works of Sallust, translated into English. With political discourses upon that author. To which is added, a translation of Cicero's four orations against Catiline.
Sallust, 86 B.C.-34 B.C.Date: MDCCXLIV. [1744]- Books
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An epistle to the supposed author of the paraphrastical Hudibrastick verses in the magazine. Together with a burlesque upon, an imiation [sic] of, and an answer to the said epistle ... By the author of The instructors instructed, or have at you, blind harpers.
Author of The instructors instructed.Date: 1740- Books
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The unmasking of the masked part of mankind & the takeing the bandage from the eyes of Bellum & the blind.
Mather, John, of Edinburgh.Date: [1799?]- Books
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The reflection. A poem. By John Maxwell, Author of a Play, call'd, Virtue in Distress. The Author being Blind.
Maxwell, John, active 1740-1761.Date: 1743- Books
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The true terms of Christian and ministerial communion founded on Scripture alone. A sermon by the late Reverend Robert Craghead, M.A. With a preface: containing a short account of the author, by Mr. Abernethy.
Craghead, Robert, 1684-1738.Date: MDCCXXXIX. [1739]- Books
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Dramatic dialogues, for the use of young persons. By the author of The blind child.
Pinchard, Elizabeth Sibthorpe.Date: [1792]- Books
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On amblyopia from di-nitrobenzol : with remarks on the employment of this substance in the making of certain explosives, and its effects on those engaged in the manufacture / by Simeon Snell.
Snell, Simeon, 1851-1909.Date: 1894- Student dissertations
Seeing the world differently : a comparison of approaches to synaesthesia and colour blindness before 1915 / Grace Howarth.
Howarth, Grace.Date: [2005]- Pictures
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John Milton dictating Paradise lost to one of his daughters while the other embroiders and his wife looks on. Wood engraving by F. Méaulle after Michael Munkacsy.
Munkácsy, Mihály, 1844-1900.Reference: 27335i- Books
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The admirable travels of Messrs. Thomas Jenkins and David Lowellin; through the unknown tracts of Africa. With the manner how Lowellin lived five years on an uninhabited spot, and, having sustained many dangerous Attacks from the wild Beasts and Savages, returned safe to London in September 1781, after having been eleven years in those extensive Regions.
Lowellin, David, 1726-Date: [1782]- Books
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The admirable travels of Messieurs Thomas Jenkins and David Lowellin through the unknown tracts of Africa: with the manner how Lowellin lived five years on an uninhabited spot; and, having sustained many dangerous Attacks from the wild Beasts and Savages, returned safe to London, in September, 1781, after having been eleven Years in those extensive Regions.
Lowellin, David, 1726-Date: [1783]- Books
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The admirable travels of Messieurs Thomas Jenkins and David Lowellin through the unknown tracts of Africa: with the manner how Lowellin lived eight years on an uninhabited spot; and, having sustained many dangerous attacks from the wild Beasts and Savages, returned safe to London, in September, 1784, after having been fourteen Years in those extensive Regions.
Lowellin, David, 1726-Date: [1785]- Books
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The admirable travels of Messrs. Thomas Jenkins and David Lowellin; containing a Tour of 3000 Miles through the unknown Tracts of Africa; describing the manner how they were driven on the western Coast by a storm, Sept. 1. 1770, and taken Prisoners by some hundreds of Negroes, sold to an Indian Chief, carried to Court 500 miles inland, raised to great honours by the sovereign Prince, with their strange mode of obtaining leave to quite his Dominions. Together with the Manners, Customs, Fashions, Complexion of the Inhabitants, their Diet, Produce, Traffick, Wealth, and Religion; as also, the numerous wild Beasts, Serpents, Fowls, Hills, Mountains, Valleys, Rivers, Plains of the Country, lying between 16 South latitude, 21 East long. and the Equator. Likewise, Their mode of travelling, and loss of Jenkins through fatigue, in attempting to cross the extensive Sands; with the manner how D. Lowellin lived full five Years on an uninhabited Spot, and his providential Delivery on the 11th of April 1779, by a company of Merchants, who blindfolded his Eyes on the Journey, to prevent him from discovering the Situation of their Country. His elegant Account of their opulent Capital, and arrival at Grand Cairo in Egypt, on the 10th of May 1780, with his substance; and a short Account of some remarkable Things in Turkey, as taken on his return to Britain in September 1781.
Lowellin, David, 1726-Date: [1782]