Proceedings of the British Academy, Volume 9British Academy - Humanities |
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Page 144
... political freedom was sown at home in England . But while we shall readily accept the view that the influence of political ideas familiar , in essence as in germ , to the later years of Elizabeth and the early Stewart age , had an ...
... political freedom was sown at home in England . But while we shall readily accept the view that the influence of political ideas familiar , in essence as in germ , to the later years of Elizabeth and the early Stewart age , had an ...
Page 179
... political and social phenomena . But , as we call them to mind in something like their probable chronological order , we find such elements of the kind as they contain even more variously and antithetically mixed ' . The irresistible ...
... political and social phenomena . But , as we call them to mind in something like their probable chronological order , we find such elements of the kind as they contain even more variously and antithetically mixed ' . The irresistible ...
Page 182
... political life . This tragedy has been asserted to have been intended to demonstrate how the best form of government is equally free from the control of aristocratic arrogance and from subjection to the turbulence of the populace . But ...
... political life . This tragedy has been asserted to have been intended to demonstrate how the best form of government is equally free from the control of aristocratic arrogance and from subjection to the turbulence of the populace . But ...
Contents
ANNUAL REPORT FOR 191819 | 19 |
ANNUAL REPORT FOR 191920 | 31 |
THE VALUE AND THE METHODS OF MYTHOLOGIC STUDY By L | 37 |
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