Germanic Mythology: Texts, Translations, Scholarshiphttp://www.germanicmythology.com/
The Making of English Literature 1911 Albert S. Cook A Concordance to Beowulf 1914 A. J. Wyatt & R. W. Chambers Beowulf with the Finnsburg Fragment 1918 Cosette Faust &
The Dream & Lie of Louis Pasteur by R. B. Pearsonhttp://www.whale.to/a/b/pearson.html
of that time, and in literature available to Pasteur. That it was widely known is indicated by the fact that the world-famous English nurse, Florence Nightingale, published an att
The Restless Spirit Part IIhttp://goethe.holtof.com/faust/TheRestlessSpiritPartII.htm
is, in Classical literature, the pathway of Iris, who is the divine messenger of Juno. So it forms a bridge symbolically between the divine and the human, the heavens and the eart
Japanese Confucian Philosophy (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy)https://plato.sydney.edu.au/entries////japanese-confucian/
other works of ancient literature associated with the Analects and Confucius. The five classics of ancient China – including the Book of History , the Book of Changes , the
Brecht's Marxist Aesthetic [Douglas Kellner]https://www.dogma.lu/txt/Kellner-Brecht.htm
(Kellner, "Literature"), and in 1919 wrote Drums in the Night , a play that dealt with the disillusionment after World War I and the German revolution. The returning soldier in th
Cause and contrast : an essay on theAmerican crisis, by T. W. MacMahonhttps://docsouth.unc.edu/imls/cause/cause.html
of Southern literature, with which I was so forcibly impressed, as to resolve upon the composition and publication of the following essay. I felt that, at this crisis in our histo
Cause and contrast : an essay on theAmerican crisis, by T. W. MacMahon
Language Loghttp://languagelog.ldc.upenn.edu/~myl/languagelog/
There's a huge literature on the subject, including textbook discussions of various ways in which ambiguities can arise. As it happens, my recent mail has brought me in-the-
Internet History Sourcebooks: Medieval Sourcebookhttps://sourcebooks.fordham.edu/basis/einhard.asp
abuse both of time and literature for a man to commit his thoughts to writing without having the ability either to arrange them or elucidate them, or attract readers by some charm
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