Dari dalam buku
Hasil 1-3 dari 23
Halaman 147
of duty , honor , the obligations of being a gentleman , the re- sponsibilities of matrimony , or the sacredness of religious belief is to be Victorian . The Victorians were so bent on being moral that they ignored the unpleasant ...
of duty , honor , the obligations of being a gentleman , the re- sponsibilities of matrimony , or the sacredness of religious belief is to be Victorian . The Victorians were so bent on being moral that they ignored the unpleasant ...
Halaman 149
Amidst the wreck of matter and the crash of worlds the Victorians clung to one essential belief— they were not under any circumstances going to admit that human life was any less interesting or important or dignified or noble ...
Amidst the wreck of matter and the crash of worlds the Victorians clung to one essential belief— they were not under any circumstances going to admit that human life was any less interesting or important or dignified or noble ...
Halaman 157
The Victorians did not take them- selves half so seriously as we take them now . Anecdote after anecdote exists to prove that the period was a time of ex- uberance and gaiety . William Morris , for example , stepped to the head of the ...
The Victorians did not take them- selves half so seriously as we take them now . Anecdote after anecdote exists to prove that the period was a time of ex- uberance and gaiety . William Morris , for example , stepped to the head of the ...
Apa yang dikatakan orang - Tulis resensi
Kami tak menemukan resensi di tempat biasanya.
Isi
LEE WILSON DODD On Learning to Read | 16 |
HEYWOOD BROUN Seabury Versus Cicero | 41 |
PHILIP E WENTWORTH What College Did | 58 |
22 bagian lainnya tidak diperlihatkan
Edisi yang lain - Lihat semua
Istilah dan frasa umum
able American appears asked become begin believe better called century continue course critics economic effect English experience eyes face fact father feel followed force give given hand head human ideas important individual interest learned least less literature living look matter mean mind Montaigne moral natural never once opinion perhaps play poet political possible present problems reason religion remain rest seems sense side sight social sort stand sure talk teachers teaching tell things thought tion took true truth turn understand universe Victorians whole write York young