The New MachiavelliDuffield, 1910 - 490 páginas Shortly after writing this book, Wells abandoned writing science fiction for a series of comic novels and novels of lower-middle-class life. This book represents that transition in his life. |
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Página 5
... sort of answering response . But in every one it presents itself extraordinarily entangled and mixed up with other , more intimate things . 66 It was so with Machiavelli . I picture him at San Casciano as he lived in retirement upon his ...
... sort of answering response . But in every one it presents itself extraordinarily entangled and mixed up with other , more intimate things . 66 It was so with Machiavelli . I picture him at San Casciano as he lived in retirement upon his ...
Página 7
... sort of Prince , the old little principality has vanished from the world . The commonweal is one man's absolute estate and responsibility no more . In Machiavelli's time it was indeed to an extreme degree one man's affair . But the days ...
... sort of Prince , the old little principality has vanished from the world . The commonweal is one man's absolute estate and responsibility no more . In Machiavelli's time it was indeed to an extreme degree one man's affair . But the days ...
Página 16
... Sunday afternoon have I played Chicago ( with the fear of God in my heart ) under an infidel pretence that it was a new sort of ark rather elaborately done . Chicago , I must explain , was based upon my 16 THE NEW MACHIAVELLI.
... Sunday afternoon have I played Chicago ( with the fear of God in my heart ) under an infidel pretence that it was a new sort of ark rather elaborately done . Chicago , I must explain , was based upon my 16 THE NEW MACHIAVELLI.
Página 21
... sort . When he was born , totally illiterate peo- ple who could neither read a book nor write more than perhaps a clumsy signature , were to be found every- where in England ; and great masses of the popula- tion were getting no ...
... sort . When he was born , totally illiterate peo- ple who could neither read a book nor write more than perhaps a clumsy signature , were to be found every- where in England ; and great masses of the popula- tion were getting no ...
Página 31
... sort of go . I ought to have made a better thing of life . " I'm sure I could people pulled my leg . have done things . Only the old They started me wrong . They never started me at all . I only began to find out what life was like when ...
... sort of go . I ought to have made a better thing of life . " I'm sure I could people pulled my leg . have done things . Only the old They started me wrong . They never started me at all . I only began to find out what life was like when ...
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Términos y frases comunes
affairs Altiora altogether asked Bailey beauty became began Blue Weekly Britten Bromstead Burslem Cambridge Cannobio Chambers Street Chris Robinson civilisation Cossington cousins Crampton Crupp damned Dayton dear dinner discussion doubt dreams Esmeer everything Evesham eyes face father feel felt girl hand Handitch hate Hatherleigh human ideas imagination intellectual interest intimate Isabel knew lead poisoning Liberal lives Locarno London looked m'lord Machiavelli Margaret marriage married matter memory mind muddle National Liberal Club never night one's organisation Pangbourne party Parvill passion pause phrase Pinky Dinky political possible presently realisation remember Remington seemed sense Shoesmith social Socialist sort splendid Staffordshire stood suddenly suppose talk Tarvrille tell There's things thought tion took tweed clothes uncle understand voice walked watched Waulsort Willersley window woman women write young
Pasajes populares
Página 121 - Keep ye the Law — be swift in all obedience — Clear the land of evil, drive the road and bridge the ford. Make ye sure to each his own That he reap where he hath sown ; By the peace among Our peoples let men know we serve the Lord!
Página 53 - And if there be no meeting past the grave, If all is darkness, silence, yet 'tis rest. Be not afraid, ye waiting hearts that weep, For God ' still giveth his beloved sleep,' And if an endless sleep he wills— so best" — will recognize that the agnostic man of science had much in common with the man of faith.
Página 121 - eathen in 'is blindness bows down to wood an' stone ; 'E don't obey no orders unless they is 'is own ; 'E keeps 'is side-arms awful : 'e leaves 'em all about, An' then comes up the regiment an' pokes the 'eathen out. All along o' dirtiness, all along o' mess, All along o' doin' things rather-more-or-less , All along of abby-nay^ kul?
Página 188 - My political conceptions were perfectly plain and honest. I had one constant desire ruling my thoughts. I meant to leave England and the empire better ordered than I found it, to organise and discipline, to build up a constructive and controlling State out of my world's confusions. We had, I saw, to suffuse education with public intention, to develop a new better-living generation with a collectivist habit of thought, to link now chaotic activities in every human affair, and particularly to catch...
Página 311 - We must have an aristocracy — not of privilege, but of understanding and purpose — or mankind will fail.
Página 372 - She is no longer a mere physical need, an aesthetic bye-play, a sentimental background; she is a moral and intellectual necessity in a man's life. She comes to the politician and demands, Is she a child or a citizen? Is she a thing or a soul? She comes to the individual man, as she came to me and asks, Is she a cherished weakling or an equal mate, an unavoidable helper?
Página 283 - London is the most interesting, beautiful, and wonderful city in the world to me, delicate in her incidental and multitudinous littleness, and stupendous in her pregnant totality: I cannot bring myself to use her as a museum or an old bookshop.
Página 33 - When I think of Bromstead nowadays I find it inseparably bound up with the disorders of my father's gardening, and the odd patchings and paintings that disfigured his houses. It was all of a piece with that. Let me try and give something of the quality of Bromstead and something of its history. It is the quality and history of a thousand places round and about London, and round and about the other great centres of population in the world. Indeed it is in a measure the quality of the whole of this...
Página 304 - Liberal party is the party against "class privilege" because it represents no class advantages, but it is also the party that is on the whole most set against Collective control because it represents no established responsibility. It is constructive only so far as its antagonism to the great owner is more powerful than its jealousy of the state. It organises only because organisation is forced upon it by the organisation of its adversaries.
Página 72 - Marks, shindies, prayers and punishments, all flavoured with the leathery stuffiness of time-worn Big Hall. . . . And then out one would come through our grey .old gate into the evening light and the spectacle of London hurrying like a cataract, London in black and brown and blue and gleaming silver, roaring like the very loom of Time.