... top ofthe house, the picture ofDorianGray grew older every year. The terrible face showed the dark secrets of his life. The heavy mouth, the yellow skin, the cruel eyes - these told the ... passed, the face in thepicture grew slowly more terrible. The Pictureof Dorian Gray Oscar Wilde retold by Jill Nevile OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS 1989 The PictureofDorianGray of my life. ... intelligent, of course, but with The PictureofDorianGray Dorian stood and listened. He could hear nothing — only the drip, drip of blood onto the floor. The Hand of a Killer again. The murdered...
... and hung them over the side. ey talked to each other across the theatre, and shared their or-anges with the tawdry painted girls who sat by them. Some women were laughing in the pit; their voices ... of us is here for. People are afraid of themselves, nowa-days. ey have forgotten the highest of all duties, the duty that one owes to one’s self. Of course they are charitable. ey feed the ... sauntered down the walk together. Two green-andwhite butteries uttered past them, and in the pear-tree at the end ofthe garden a thrush began to sing.‘You are glad you have met me, Mr. Gray, ’...
... places, but declares at the bottom of page 135, " ;The reign of Akbar is one ofthe most important in the history of India; it is one ofthe most important in the history ofthe world"); Mountstuart ... further their interests, and the peasants The most powerful of these Rajput chiefs was the Prince of Mewâr who had particularly attracted the attention ofthe Emperor by his support ofthe ... for followers of other faiths, with one ofthe greatest stains in the history of humanity. When a tax-collector gathered the taxes ofthe Hindus and the payment had been made, the Hindu was...
... Sydney from the East Side ofthe Cove View of Sydney from the East Side ofthe Cove View of Sydney from the West Side ofthe Cove View of Sydney from the West Side ofthe Cove To JOHN HUNTER, ... until the commencement ofthe year 1809, the date and termination ofthe facts which I shall elicit in the succeeding pages. At the close ofthe year 1795, the public and private stock ofthe ... consequence of which was the destruction of some ofthe plundering tribes; but, in these instances, the circumstances justified the deed, and the governor sent assistance to them, rather than the contrary....
... VII. The Veins 1. Introduction2. The Pulmonary Veins3. The Systemic Veins a. The Veins ofthe Heart b. The Veins ofthe Head and Neck 1. The Veins ofthe Exterior ofthe Head and Face2. The ... ofthe Neck3. The Diploic Veins4. The Veins ofthe Brain5. The Sinuses ofthe Dura Mater. Ophthalmic Veins and Emissary Veinsc. The Veins ofthe Upper Extremity and Thorax d. The Veins of ... ofthe frontal lobe ofthe brain. The inferior surface forms the back part ofthe roof ofthe orbit, and the upper boundary ofthe superior orbital fissure. This fissure is of a triangular form,...
... such activities as the contemplation ofthe nature and laws ofthe universe, the contemplation of God, and the appreciation of beauty. This helps us appreciate the possibility of certain relations ... the forms ofthe experience, and love, of beauty that are celebratedin the speech of Diotima in Plato’s Symposium. In the theistic Platonist’sview it is also a glimpse ofthe beauty ofthe divine ... events to unfold beforehe knows exactly what the outcome will be.Far to the other side ofthe spectrum from the Open Theists and theirview of providence there are Christians like John Calvin who...
... his emphasis ontruth theories as theories of interpretation, on the other. In usinga truth theory as a theory of interpretation, we use the T-theorems of the theory rather than its axioms. ... characterization of a friendas “another I”, one ofthethemesofthe paper is the relationbetween the first-person and third-person aspects of our perceptualconcept (where a perceptual concept is the concept ... to the effect that the world is a certain way. The way the world is postu-lated to be is the truth condition ofthe thought the way the worldhas to be for the thought to be true. To judge the...
... details of the instrumentation and ensemble open—leave even more to the discretion of the performer. The thinner the work, the more the performertakes the limelight and the ... intended it. Viewed this way, the content of an instance of the work is the sounds apparent to the audiencewithin the boundaries of performance. Many of the arguments I will considerwould ... that the present way of deciding whether something is usefulas art is to ask whether it is interrupted by the actions of others, or whether it isfluent with the actions of ...
... without it they willnot be realizers ofthe same quale, and there is nothing that could make one of them rather than any ofthe others a realizer of that quale. But this imposes the requirement ... what it isfor the experiences in the one case (of things ofthe same color, one in shadowand the other not) to be different and for the experiences in the other case (of things of different colors, ... instantiations ofthe different realizers have the sameeffects on the subject’s subsequent memories. The change -of- realizer mechanismwill have to be part of each ofthe total realizers ofthe quale;...