935 resultados para Wager of battle.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Appendix includes "Biographical sketches of the heroes of Waterloo and other distinguished public characters."
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Mode of access: Internet.
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First published in Blackwood's magazine, May 1871.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Hazlitt tracts, v.19, no.5 Portrait of Isaac Ingall, "who lived in... Battle Abbey...aged 120 years," glued in back of book.
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110 lines of Pope's Poem have been incorporated in the Play, and are indicated by brackets.--Author's note.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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This chapter argues that the novels of Ford's Parade's End tetralogy occupy a significant place in the development of "disenchanted" fiction about the First World War. The values of Ernest Raymond's patriotic Tell England are contrasted with those of C. E Montague's Disenchantment, providing a brief synopsis of the early 1920s response to the conflict. Parade's End is seen as introducing several key themes in to the post-First World War discursive field, including national identity, psychology, memory, and time. The presentation of these aligned with the formal aspects of the novel, allows it to push the boundaries of the readerly horizon of expectations. Frayn argues that Ford's readership, though moderately-sized, was influential from a literary point of view, and thus facilitated the reception of later, more vitriolic, criticisms of war.
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Relief shown by hachures.