The World of H.G. WellsM. Kennerley, 1915 - 189 lappuses |
No grāmatas satura
1.–5. rezultāts no 11.
33. lappuse
... tives and affections that are private and have no collective significance represent disorder . Now the whole purpose of Wells's later work has been to illuminate and refine this proposi- tion . He has flatly distinguished between two ...
... tives and affections that are private and have no collective significance represent disorder . Now the whole purpose of Wells's later work has been to illuminate and refine this proposi- tion . He has flatly distinguished between two ...
35. lappuse
... tive relish of a constructive instinct . It ex- presses also a sheer curiosity about the future . In a chapter of his book on America Wells has traced the development of what he calls his prophetic habit of mind as a passage through ...
... tive relish of a constructive instinct . It ex- presses also a sheer curiosity about the future . In a chapter of his book on America Wells has traced the development of what he calls his prophetic habit of mind as a passage through ...
36. lappuse
... tive to fine immediate things through this anticipatory habit . This habit of mind confronts and per- plexes my sense of things that simply are , with my brooding preoccupation with how they will shape pres- ently , what they will lead ...
... tive to fine immediate things through this anticipatory habit . This habit of mind confronts and per- plexes my sense of things that simply are , with my brooding preoccupation with how they will shape pres- ently , what they will lead ...
47. lappuse
... - ley , and it is reasonably plain that the mood in which he wrote his scientific romances was strongly impregnated by Huxley's influence . The sinister , incalculable , capricious , destruc- tive forces TOWARDS SOCIALISM 4.7.
... - ley , and it is reasonably plain that the mood in which he wrote his scientific romances was strongly impregnated by Huxley's influence . The sinister , incalculable , capricious , destruc- tive forces TOWARDS SOCIALISM 4.7.
48. lappuse
Van Wyck Brooks. The sinister , incalculable , capricious , destruc- tive forces outside man are symbolized , as I have said , by those colliding comets , invading Martians , and monstrous creatures among which the earlier Wells moved ...
Van Wyck Brooks. The sinister , incalculable , capricious , destruc- tive forces outside man are symbolized , as I have said , by those colliding comets , invading Martians , and monstrous creatures among which the earlier Wells moved ...
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American Ann Veronica appears Arnold artistic beautiful become believe called character cialism collective conception confusion Conrad Consider constructive coöperation detachment discoveries economic economic determinism English ethical everything exist experience Fabian Society fact feel future George Ponderevo grow hand human nature ideal ideas imagination implies individual inevitably instinct intellectual irresponsible Jules Verne kind Kipps Lewisham light living Machiavelli machine Matthew Arnold mean ment merely method Modern Utopia moral muddled never novels organ pass passage Passionate Friends philosophy plain planet Plutarch point of view political Polly possible present primary world purpose quinine race reality relish Remington Republican romances Samurai says scheme scientific secondary world sense Sidney Webb Sleeper Awakes socialism socialist society sonal sort spirit of unrest Superman synthetic motive theory things thought tion tissue and succession tive Tono-Bungay Trafford ture Wells's whole writings