New England Magazine, Volumen55New England Magazine Company, 1916 |
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Página 45
... civilization but a few hours distant , retreat here cannot be called exile . He who , with health partly restored , at last wearies of endless calm , may fol- low Mark Twain's recipe : " To secure a climate , mark the thermometer at ...
... civilization but a few hours distant , retreat here cannot be called exile . He who , with health partly restored , at last wearies of endless calm , may fol- low Mark Twain's recipe : " To secure a climate , mark the thermometer at ...
Página 47
... civilization . Unchanging warmth may make the body excessively sensitive to cold , and hence a stay at the islands will not in most cases wisely exceed two years , un- less health or convenience calls for a per- manent residence there ...
... civilization . Unchanging warmth may make the body excessively sensitive to cold , and hence a stay at the islands will not in most cases wisely exceed two years , un- less health or convenience calls for a per- manent residence there ...
Página 51
... civilization to which they were capable of attaining , to make of the separated islands a compact ter- ritory , of the hetrogenous population a homogeneous people . Before the creation of a respectable republic it was necessary to ...
... civilization to which they were capable of attaining , to make of the separated islands a compact ter- ritory , of the hetrogenous population a homogeneous people . Before the creation of a respectable republic it was necessary to ...
Página 68
... civilization in its highest form , and yet it is her object to enslave the world by the methodical and unbridled exercise of brute force ! What are we to think of the amazing contrast between German culture and the ends aimed at , as ...
... civilization in its highest form , and yet it is her object to enslave the world by the methodical and unbridled exercise of brute force ! What are we to think of the amazing contrast between German culture and the ends aimed at , as ...
Página 69
... civilization grew in antag- onism to Graeco - Roman civilization . God's adoption of the former meant his rejection of the latter . The Ger- man consciousness , then , in its full realization , is nothing less than the divine ...
... civilization grew in antag- onism to Graeco - Roman civilization . God's adoption of the former meant his rejection of the latter . The Ger- man consciousness , then , in its full realization , is nothing less than the divine ...
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