The Pacific Spectator, Količina 8Pacific Coast Committee for the Humanities of the American Council of Learned Societies, 1954 |
Iz vsebine knjige
Zadetki 1–3 od 40
Stran 283
... live there . The Mercator map could not show the relationships of the great land masses ; the polar map can . Europe and Asia are shown in their actual space and size relations to North America . Hence , it is no wonder that this polar ...
... live there . The Mercator map could not show the relationships of the great land masses ; the polar map can . Europe and Asia are shown in their actual space and size relations to North America . Hence , it is no wonder that this polar ...
Stran 316
... live on with it . " This priest repeats in a way the tragic message of Dostoevski's Grand Inquisitor . Asked why he confessed his doubts , Unamuno answered in an article written in 1933 for the newspaper Ahora by saying that " the ...
... live on with it . " This priest repeats in a way the tragic message of Dostoevski's Grand Inquisitor . Asked why he confessed his doubts , Unamuno answered in an article written in 1933 for the newspaper Ahora by saying that " the ...
Stran 339
... live their lives for them , and see the world as they would see it . If he succeeds in doing this , he enables us in turn , as spectators and readers , to identify ourselves sympathetically with his fictional personages . Our in- sight ...
... live their lives for them , and see the world as they would see it . If he succeeds in doing this , he enables us in turn , as spectators and readers , to identify ourselves sympathetically with his fictional personages . Our in- sight ...
Vsebina
INTERPRETATION | 7 |
INGE A STORY Bernard Taper | 21 |
NUMBER 1 | 32 |
Avtorske pravice | |
5 preostalih delov ni prikazanih
Druge izdaje - Prikaži vse
Pogosti izrazi in povedi
accept Aires American appeared Argentina asked become began believe Browning Buenos California called century Church comes common continued course cultural early eyes face fact feel felt followed friends Fung gave girls give hand head hope human important Indian individual industrial Inge interest land language later less letter literature live looked major matter means meeting mind mother Narges nature never North once opened organization Park party perhaps period poem poetry poets political position present reason River seemed sense side social society South talk tell thing thought tion told took tribes turn Unamuno United University Uruguay whole writing