The Harvard Classics, Volumen51Charles William Eliot P.F. Collier & son, 1914 |
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Página 13
... things run their course on earth ; now , under the spell of the man of Galilee , they had shivered into a rainbow vapor , a mist of times past , unreal , unthinkable , save where the historian may reconstruct a few ruins or the poet ...
... things run their course on earth ; now , under the spell of the man of Galilee , they had shivered into a rainbow vapor , a mist of times past , unreal , unthinkable , save where the historian may reconstruct a few ruins or the poet ...
Página 14
... things were left standing , a fragmentary empire of the East centering in Constantinople , and a bishopric of Rome of vastly increased importance that was soon to be known as the Papacy , and that already showed symptoms of attempting ...
... things were left standing , a fragmentary empire of the East centering in Constantinople , and a bishopric of Rome of vastly increased importance that was soon to be known as the Papacy , and that already showed symptoms of attempting ...
Página 24
... things to their own native effort . It was in the eighth and seventh centuries B. C. that the Greeks became a new species of mankind . In this , the time of their expansion from an Ægean into a Mediterranean peo- ple , they shook off ...
... things to their own native effort . It was in the eighth and seventh centuries B. C. that the Greeks became a new species of mankind . In this , the time of their expansion from an Ægean into a Mediterranean peo- ple , they shook off ...
Página 34
... things , and I do not know , as I have often re- marked , a better school wherein to model life than by inces- santly exposing to it the diversity of so many other lives , Cf. Montaigne's " Institution and Education of Children " in ...
... things , and I do not know , as I have often re- marked , a better school wherein to model life than by inces- santly exposing to it the diversity of so many other lives , Cf. Montaigne's " Institution and Education of Children " in ...
Página 35
... thing . To the everlast- ing credit of the Renaissance men they appreciated its value , and worked hard to acquire it , thus grappling with reality . No longer would they merely scan the surface of things ; they would pierce , as Dante ...
... thing . To the everlast- ing credit of the Renaissance men they appreciated its value , and worked hard to acquire it , thus grappling with reality . No longer would they merely scan the surface of things ; they would pierce , as Dante ...
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