Keller, Arthur Ignatius, 1866-1924
Arthur I. Keller American illustrator
Arthur I. Keller American illustrator (1866-1924)
Keller, Arthur Ignatius
Keller, Arthur I. 1866-1924
Keller, Arthur Ignatius (American painter and illustrator, 1866-1924)
Keller, Arthur I. (Arthur Ignatius), 1867-1924
VIAF ID: 49608692 ( Personal )
Permalink: http://viaf.org/viaf/49608692
Preferred Forms
- 100 0 _ ‡a Arthur I. Keller ‡c American illustrator
- 100 0 _ ‡a Arthur I. Keller ‡c American illustrator (1866-1924)
- 100 1 _ ‡a Keller, Arthur I. ‡d 1866-1924
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- 100 1 _ ‡a Keller, Arthur Ignatius ‡d 1866-1924
- 100 1 _ ‡a Keller, Arthur Ignatius ‡g American painter and illustrator, 1866-1924
- 100 1 _ ‡a Keller, Arthur Ignatius, ‡d 1866-1924
- 100 1 _ ‡a Keller, Arthur Ignatius, ‡d 1866-1924
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4xx's: Alternate Name Forms (27)
5xx's: Related Names (11)
- 500 1 _ ‡a Griffin, Stephen
- 500 1 _ ‡a Irving, Washington ‡d 1783-1859
- 500 1 _ ‡a Löfftz, Ludwig von ‡d 1845-1910 ‡4 beza ‡4 https://d-nb.info/standards/elementset/gnd#acquaintanceshipOrFriendship ‡e Bekanntschaft
- 500 1 _ ‡a Löfftz, Ludwig von ‡d 1845-1910
- 500 1 _ ‡a McCutcheon, George Barr ‡d 1866-1928
- 551 _ _ ‡a München ‡4 ortw ‡4 https://d-nb.info/standards/elementset/gnd#placeOfActivity
- 551 _ _ ‡a New York, NY ‡4 ortg ‡4 https://d-nb.info/standards/elementset/gnd#placeOfBirth
- 500 1 _ ‡a Reicher, Heinrich
- 500 1 _ ‡a Richardson, R. K. ‡d 1877-
- 551 _ _ ‡a Riverdale, NY ‡4 orts ‡4 https://d-nb.info/standards/elementset/gnd#placeOfDeath
- 500 1 _ ‡a Wister, Owen ‡d 1860-1938)
Works
Title | Sources |
---|---|
54-40 or fight | |
The arm-chair at the inn | |
Arthur Ignatius Keller, 1866-1924, c1988: | |
The calling of Dan Matthews | |
The Clansman : an historical romance of the Ku Klux Klan | |
The destroying angel | |
The Grafters | |
[The Hayden house was a loafing and meeting place] | |
[He bowed himself out backward] | |
He came straight on up the terrace | |
He stood looking on, almost within arms-reach | |
He surprised couples stealing embraces | |
Heroines of fiction, [...] | |
The house of de Mailly : a romance | |
[How far you go, Mister Green?] | |
[I hurl the everlasting curse of a nation] | |
I'm sorry to have troubled you, she said coldly and tried to look dignified | |
The impossible boy | |
In the arena : stories of political life | |
I intend to kill him, I said | |
An invitation to the Policemen's Choral Society ... | |
Is that all, Mother? | |
[It is different from what you think] | |
Jane stood in the doorway, quietly regarding them | |
Just for two | |
The law of the land : of Miss Lady, whom it involved in mystery, and of John Eddring, gentleman of the South, who read its deeper meaning | |
The legend of Sleepy Hollow | |
The light in the clearing : a tale of the North country in the time of Silas Wright | |
The Lincoln legion; the story of its founder and forerunners | |
The mad woman -- for she had become that -- had tried to stab Kathleen | |
[Man hailing seated man reading with horse race and crowd in background] | |
[Man with document greeting wife or friend and others in crowded study] | |
[Man with hand on head of weeping woman on porch] | |
Marie shrank visibly ... | |
[Men brandishing sticks over fallen man and confronting man by stairs with pistol] | |
[Mirthful man telling story to four people] | |
Mr. Crewe's career | |
Nothing will induce me to live in the Dennison place | |
[Old couple looking at telephone while young couple watches] | |
The place of honeymoons | |
The Prince of Graustark | |
[Put up your hands] | |
Rat Ricketts confesses | |
The Red city : a novel of the second administration of President Washington | |
[The result was the usual one] | |
Right about face! | |
The romance of an old-fashioned gentleman | |
Say you will marry me, he pleaded | |
Scene in the House of Representatives : a witticism from the chair | |
Seated on the desk was Graham | |
The severed mantle | |
She had an instant's impression of the room | |
She had wrung it from him ... | |
So extraordinary was the sight that ... | |
The sport of kings | |
The storm signal | |
Stratagems and spoils : stories of love and politics | |
Suppose that you and I were running this little planet ... | |
Take that, he feebly said, and swear that it shall be delivered | |
Tales of the cloister | |
Tell them there is no fault in him | |
Then he 'rested me | |
Then I didn't know anything more until I came to myself | |
[There was a dead silence broken only by chuckling laughter] | |
Though not susceptible to aesthetic emotion | |
The tiger's coat | |
Tomorrow's tangle | |
Tugurt was at her feet, cruel, leering, mysterious, fascinating | |
Unspeakable gentleman, 1922: | |
Upon the threshold she stopped | |
El Valle del terror | |
The Valley of Fear | |
Virginian | |
We have shown you how good is the end of those who are faithful | |
Well, who am I, then? haven't I got some right to know who my mother and father were? | |
[What, in God's name, is this nonsense?] | |
When checked by a body of marching soldiers, the old bluffer cried ... | |
When the world screamed | |
Where's Mother? | |
[Whitaker's jaw dropped and his eyes widened with wonder and pity] | |
The whole assembly was soon in an uproar | |
Why, Richard, I have never loved my husband | |
Willie Cameron said steadily, I wouldn't tell you ... | |
The window at the White Cat | |
[With a sudden cry of joy stretched out his hand ... ] | |
Within these walls | |
[Woman in nightgown, woman by curtains, and man reflected in mirror] | |
[Woman pleading with angry man] | |
[Woman pointing gun at man laying blanket on beach] | |
[I won't listen in silence to the profanity of that old heathen] | |
The Works of F. Hopkinson Smith. | |
I wouldn't call out, Mr. Cardew, said a cold voice, I have my left hand on a revolver | |
[You must have full faith in Jane, Lynn] | |
You, you, he gurgled, I curse you! | |
[Young man escorting young women down street] | |
You're welcome, Miss |