The Book of Days was Robert Chambers' last publication, and perhaps his most elaborate.
This speech does not survive but has often been paraphrased, for instance in the Book of Days:
At the end of "Book of Days" the workmen enter the town and come across the drawings traced into a wall.
This "Book of Days", as he called it, sheds light on James Joyce's life between the years 1906 and 1909.
In "Book of Days," one can tell.
I was going to the Service and found I had forgot my Book of Days.
The Book of Days claims the motive was to "avenge the death of her friend Barboroux".
The Book of Days was Chambers's last major publication, and perhaps his most elaborate.
Book of Days may refer to:
The scope of "Book of Days" becomes wider at the end, as past and present merge in a post-modern performance that doesn't begin to work.