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The Works of Robert G. Ingersoll

“The destroyer of weeds, thistles, and thorns is a benefactor, whether he soweth grain or not.”

In Twelve Volumes, Volume I · Lectures · 1901
The Dresden Edition

To

Eva A. Ingersoll,

My wife,

a woman without superstition.

This volume is dedicated.

For the love of God. For the use of man.

This volume opens the entire edition with the Publisher’s Preface by C. P. Farrell, dated New York, July 1900.

WorkCategoryYear
About Farming in Illinois To Plow is to Pray — to Plant is to Prophesy, and the Harvest Answers and Fulfills.Lecture1877
Heretics and Heresies Liberty, a Word without which all other Words are VainLecture1874
Humboldt The Universe is Governed by LawLecture1869
Individuality "His Soul was like a Star and dwelt apart."Lecture1873
The Ghosts Let them cover their eyeless sockets with their fleshless hands and fade forever from the imagination of men.Lecture1877
The Gods An Honest God is the Noblest Work of ManLecture1872
The Liberty of Man, Woman, and Child Liberty sustains the same Relation to Mind that Space does to Matter.Lecture1877
Thomas Paine With His Name Left Out, the History of Liberty Cannot be WrittenLecture1870
What Must We Do To Be Saved? A close reading of the four gospels.Lecture1880
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