Nonfiction by George Eliot Sort by: Title Date Worldliness and Otherworldliness: The Poet Young Woman in France: Madame de Sablé Who Wrote the Waverly Novels? Translations and Translators Transatlantic Latter-Day Poetry Three Months in Weimar Thomas Carlyle The Shaving of Shagpat The Romantic School of Music The Natural History of German Life The Morality of Wilhelm Meister The Lover's Seat The Life of Sterling The Influence of Rationalism The Grammar of Ornament The Future of German Philosophy The Creed of Christendom The Court of Austria The Art of the Ancients The Art and Artists of Greece The Antigone and Its Moral Story of a Blue-Bottle Silly Novels by Lady Novelists Sight-seeing in Germany and the Tyrol Servants' Logic Review of The Nemesis of Faith by J.A. Froude Recollections of Heine Rachel Gray Poetry and Prose, from the Notebook of an Eccentric: The Wisdom of the Child Pictures of Life in French Novels Notice of The Comic History of England Modern Housekeeping Michelet on the Reformation Menander and the Greek Comedy Memoirs of the Court of Austria Margaret Fuller and Mary Wollstonecraft Mackay's Progress of the Intellect Love in the Drama Lord Brougham's Literature Liszt, Wagner, and Weimar Life and Opinions of Milton Introduction to Genesis History, Biography, Voyages and Travels History of German Protestantism Heine's Poems Heine's Book of Songs German Wit: Heinrich Heine German Mythology and Legend Futile Falsehoods Ferny Combes Felice Orsini Evangelical Teaching: Dr. Cumming Church History of the Nineteenth Century Belles Lettres and Art [Poetry review, October 1857] Belles Lettres and Art [July 1856] Belles Lettres [Poetry review, October 1856] Belles Lettres [October 1855] Belles Lettres [July 1855] Belles Lettres [January 1857] Belles Lettres [Jan 1856] Art and Belles Lettres [April 1856] Address to Working Men, by Felix Holt A Word for the Germans A Tragic Story Essays and Leaves from a Notebook (1885) [Review of] Christianity in its Various Aspects, The Jesuits, [and] Priests, Women, and Families