The Living Age, Band 274Living Age Company, 1912 |
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Seite 59
... play- ers who smote other players ' heads in- stead of their own balls . Though crook and mallet are such distinct forms , it is easy to realize that in their earlier and cruder shapes they might be interchangeable . We actually find in ...
... play- ers who smote other players ' heads in- stead of their own balls . Though crook and mallet are such distinct forms , it is easy to realize that in their earlier and cruder shapes they might be interchangeable . We actually find in ...
Seite 160
... play , on which points , I be- lieve , opinions are divided , it is impos- sible to recognize certain surviving qualities in the drama - its stern sup- pression of irrelevancies and the perfect unity of its plan - without accepting it ...
... play , on which points , I be- lieve , opinions are divided , it is impos- sible to recognize certain surviving qualities in the drama - its stern sup- pression of irrelevancies and the perfect unity of its plan - without accepting it ...
Seite 398
... play . In a letter to Mr. Henry James , Robert Louis Stevenson said : " I have always held ( upon no evidence what- ever , from a mere sentiment or intui- tion ) that politics was the dirtiest , the most foolish , and the most random of ...
... play . In a letter to Mr. Henry James , Robert Louis Stevenson said : " I have always held ( upon no evidence what- ever , from a mere sentiment or intui- tion ) that politics was the dirtiest , the most foolish , and the most random of ...
Inhalt
The Situation in Turkey | 67 |
SEVENTH SERIES | 70 |
The Situation in Turkey By Sir Edwin Pears | 78 |
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