| Robert A. Norman - 2004 - 124 str.
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| Frank Harris - 2004 - 332 str.
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| Carol Brightman - 2004 - 300 str.
...money, and manifests itself among the better-off as a terror of ageing and disease. As in Shakespeare: "And so, from hour to hour we ripe and ripe, / And...hour we rot and rot, / And thereby hangs a tale." And beneath the fear of loss, a variation on the fear of change, lies a wound about which the therapeutic... | |
| 1984 - 472 str.
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| Neil Rhodes - 2004 - 260 str.
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| Russ McDonald - 2004 - 952 str.
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| Yu Jin Ko - 2004 - 228 str.
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| William Shakespeare - 2005 - 900 str.
...eye, Says very wisely, 'It is ten o'clock: Thus we may see,' quoth he, 'how the world wags: 'Tis but an hour ago since it was nine, And after one hour...the time, My lungs began to crow like chanticleer, 30 That fools should be so deep-contemplative; And I did laugh, sans intermission, An hour by his dial.... | |
| John Russell Brown - 2005 - 264 str.
...of a lawyer do not affect, for him, the pace of Time ;» for him, Time travels regularly : 'Tis but an hour ago since it was nine, And after one hour...ripe, And then, from hour to hour, we rot and rot. . . . (II. vii. 24-7) Determined to treat a spade only as a spade, Touchstone will not be carried away... | |
| William Hutchings - 2005 - 194 str.
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