Click here to connect to Project Gutenberg, an expansive collection of "fine literature digitally re-published."

Visit CARRIE, a full-text electronic library maintained by the University of Kansas.  It has over a million titles in English and others in Dutch, Esperanto, French, etc.

Here is the Internet Library of Early Journals, a digital library with e-texts of the following eighteenth- and nineteenth-century journals:  Annual Register, Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, Gentleman's Magazine, Notes and Queries, Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society, and The Builder.

Click here for the Quarterly Review, 1809-24.

Click here for a link to the complete text of John Locke's Second Treatise on Government.  The site is conveniently broken down into individual clickable chapters.

Visit EuroDocs: Primary Historical Documents from Western Europe (selected transcriptions, facsimiles and translations).

Here is a link to Macaulay on Democratic Government, which includes selections from the essays of Thomas Babington Macaulay.  The site is edited by Eyler Robert Coates, Sr.

Here is a link to Thomas Jefferson on Politics and Government, quotations from the writings of Thomas Jefferson.

Click here to visit the Making of America, "a digital library of primary sources in American social history from the antebellum period through reconstruction."

This leads to a site with a lot of information on the Declaration of Independence.  Here is a facsimile image of an original copy of the Declaration.  Click here to see translations of the Declaration into various foreign languages (e.g., Italian, Japanese, Hebrew), with literal re-translations back into English!

Click here for the complete text of the Versailles Treaty (28 June 1918), as well as maps, cartoons, photos, and a recommended reading list.

Read the complete works of William Shakespeare!

Read The Heroic Age, a journal of early medieval northwestern Europe.

Read Finest Hour, a journal of The Churchill Center and International Churchill Societies.