Blackwood's Magazine, Volumen 186W. Blackwood, 1909 |
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Página 1
... whole history of policy , of letters , and of society as a cycle of recurring human types . Perioles repeats himself in Cæsar , Aristides in in Cato : Frederick the Great has a pre- cursor in Henri IV . and a successor in Cavour ...
... whole history of policy , of letters , and of society as a cycle of recurring human types . Perioles repeats himself in Cæsar , Aristides in in Cato : Frederick the Great has a pre- cursor in Henri IV . and a successor in Cavour ...
Página 4
... whole of life from a parlour- window . Besides , he does not like to feel doubts as to the sex of his author . The Cockney , to put the matter fairly , has the faults of all people with a limited out- look , and the faults are patent ...
... whole of life from a parlour- window . Besides , he does not like to feel doubts as to the sex of his author . The Cockney , to put the matter fairly , has the faults of all people with a limited out- look , and the faults are patent ...
Página 9
... and crude realities . It cannot seri- ously picture any world beyond the glow of its fireside . The whole earth , on its theory , is made up of men who have at bottom the same temperament as one type of urban English- man , and the 1909.1.
... and crude realities . It cannot seri- ously picture any world beyond the glow of its fireside . The whole earth , on its theory , is made up of men who have at bottom the same temperament as one type of urban English- man , and the 1909.1.
Página 11
... whole stands towards other nations as primitive man stood towards his fellows . There is no law sovereign between States , however we may dis- guise the fact , because there is no higher power capable of enforcing its mandates . Any ...
... whole stands towards other nations as primitive man stood towards his fellows . There is no law sovereign between States , however we may dis- guise the fact , because there is no higher power capable of enforcing its mandates . Any ...
Página 15
... whole of the normal and beneficent activities of a great Empire are as nothing to him in comparison with the ill - humours of a little part . Because he wants to give the steerage passengers better food and quarters he is quite willing ...
... whole of the normal and beneficent activities of a great Empire are as nothing to him in comparison with the ill - humours of a little part . Because he wants to give the steerage passengers better food and quarters he is quite willing ...
Índice
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284 | |
305 | |
377 | |
393 | |
424 | |
437 | |
461 | |
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491 | |
508 | |
516 | |
541 | |
553 | |
673 | |
686 | |
699 | |
713 | |
725 | |
735 | |
755 | |
769 | |
781 | |
793 | |
804 | |
810 | |
826 | |
843 | |
857 | |
870 | |
873 | |
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