The Quarterly Review, Volumen296William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, John Murray, Sir John Murray IV, Rowland Edmund Prothero (Baron Ernle), George Walter Prothero John Murray, 1958 |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-3 de 42
Página 177
... wrote : .. ... ' To read Plato is to discuss our own problems without the exasperation caused when we are , as it were , embedded in them . But how are they our own problems ? What is it that makes the world of ancient Greece so similar ...
... wrote : .. ... ' To read Plato is to discuss our own problems without the exasperation caused when we are , as it were , embedded in them . But how are they our own problems ? What is it that makes the world of ancient Greece so similar ...
Página 201
... wrote , in the course of a despatch to his sovereign : ' He ought , perhaps , to add that he has the strongest opinion , upon political grounds and grounds other than political , against spending old age under the strain of that ...
... wrote , in the course of a despatch to his sovereign : ' He ought , perhaps , to add that he has the strongest opinion , upon political grounds and grounds other than political , against spending old age under the strain of that ...
Página 273
... wrote a treatise on the Four Last Things of Man ; Chastellain wrote a long poem called Le Pas de la Mort ; and Olivier de la Marche wrote a lament about all the princesses who had died in his lifetime . Later Deschamps wrote at least ...
... wrote a treatise on the Four Last Things of Man ; Chastellain wrote a long poem called Le Pas de la Mort ; and Olivier de la Marche wrote a lament about all the princesses who had died in his lifetime . Later Deschamps wrote at least ...
Contenido
Imperialism and Colonialism | 1 |
s Philosophy Obsolete? | 12 |
What we owe Lord Halifax | 22 |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras 35 secciones no mostradas
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Términos y frases comunes
Action française Africa American animals appear Bahá'í faith Bahá'u'lláh Bantu barons become Britain British cent century character Christian Church Churchill civilization colonialism coloured Communist culture Cyprus deal death economic England English Enosis Europe European existence fact Federal feeling Finland Finnish forces Formosa France French French-Canadian Government Greece Greek Hazor Helsinki House human idea industry interest Iron Curtain Kaohsiung Keelung King land later less Liberal living Lord Halifax macabre means ment Middle Temple million mind Minister modern moral nationalist nature negro never Parliament Party perhaps period person Planning political present problem Progressive-Conservative reader reform relations religion religious Roman Russia Shakespeare social society South South Tyrol Southern species story things thought timocracy tion to-day trade tropics union Western whole words writes wrote