New Dawn's Birthing: Oracle of Delphi |
Category: Information 6 comments 27 May 2003 @ 06:55 by spiritseek : Oracle of Delphihttp://www.oracleofdelphi.com/newpage2.html http://www.pbs.org/empires/thegreeks/background/7_p1.html http://www.continentallocating.com/World.Literature/Links/delphi.htm http://www.ehistory.com/world/articles/ArticleView.cfm?AID=8 http://www.magicaljourneys.com/Delphi/delphi-interest-oedipus.html http://www.dreamscape.com/morgana/desdemon.htm http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/cl135/Students/Leslie_DesMarteau/delphi.htm 1 Jun 2003 @ 02:43 by newdawn : spiritseek many thanks for the links 17 Jun 2003 @ 12:04 by shawa : Pandora´s Box Swan and I, we had an entry about the Oracle. In the Workgroups space, down the list, the Room is called Pandora´s Box and you can access the Newslog. :-) 29 Jan 2015 @ 10:08 by Sri @83.83.50.95 : uWKeXZjAHuoWc Do you understand why the perefct Dopamine most of first really like minimizes for you to I i would love you but you aren't a similar anymore' affliction? Both a person don't acquire that race, or perhaps you are not happy with your award when you earn this. About sometimes stop from the spectrum, you want something is hard and remote.It's just not just throughout interactions. As human beings, all of us always desire something all of us by some means know, is not easy to have . Their which scorching vehicle, that will brilliant toned, that will delicious work. When you have excellent career written content, you want more earnings. For those who have wonderful wage , you need much more satisfaction. If you have the two, you need more hours. We would like What we should DONT HAVE!! 29 Jan 2015 @ 14:33 by Stanley @190.37.124.130 : LpfJeztSfOzFoJM . 3v. (Everyman Library.) Esp. Of Coaches, Of the Incommodity of Greatness, Of Vanity, and Of Experience. 47. CERVANTES, Don Quixote. *48. SHAKESPEARE:, Plays. Esp. Hamlet, Lear, Macbeth, Othello, Romeo and Juliet, Julius Caesar, Henry IV, Merchant of Venice, As You Like It, Midsummer Night’s Dream, Timon of Athens, and The Tempest. 34. TAINE, bk. II, chs. 1-4. 37. GRAY, chs. 4, 7. 12. WILLIAMS, bk. II, chs. 4-8. 11. FAURE, vol. III, chs. 4-6. GROUP VIII. EUROPE IN THE SEVENTEENTH CENTURY 8. BREASTED and ROBINSON, vol. II, ch. 15. 44. FAGUET, sections on the seeettvennh century. 49. LA ROCHEFOUCAULD, Reflections. 50. MOLIERE, Plays. Esp. Tartuffe, The Miser, The Misanthrope, The Bourgeois Gentleman, The Feast of the Statue (Don Juan). *51. BACON, F., Essays. All. (Everyman Library.) 52. MILTON, J., Lycidas, L’Allegro, Il Penseroso, Sonnets, Areopagitica, and selections from Paradise Lost. 12. WILLIAMS, bk. II, chs.9-13. 41. HOFFDING, sections on Bacon, Descartes, Hobbes, Locke, Spinoza, and Leibnitz. 53. HOBBES, Leviathan. (Everyman Library.) 54. SPINOZA, Ethics and On the Improvement of the Understanding. (Everyman Library.) 11. FAURE, vol. IV, chs. 1-4. 37. GRAY, chs. 9-10. GROUP IX. EUROPE IN THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY 8. BREASTED and ROBINSON, vol. II, chs. 16-21. 5. WELLS, chs. 26-27. 44. FAGUET, sections on the eighteenth century. 55. SAINTE-BEUVE, Portraits of the l8th Century. 56. VOLTAIRE, Works. I-vol. ed. Esp. Candide, Zadig, and essays on Toleration and History. 57. ROUSSEAU, J.J., Confessions. 58. TAINE, H., Origins of Contemporary France. 6v. vols. I-IV. *59. CARLYLE, The French Revolution. 2v. (Everyman Library.) 34. TAINE, History of English Literature, bk. Ill, chs. 4-7. *60. BOSWELL, Life of Samuel Johnson. 2v. (Everyman Library.) 61. FIELDING, H., Tom Jones. (Everyman Library, 2v.) 62. STERNE, L., Tristram Shandy. (Everyman Library.) *63. SWIFT, J., Gulliver’s Travels. (Everyman Library.) 64. HUME, D., Treatise on Human Nature. 2v. (Everyman Library.) Esp. bks. II and III. 65. WOLLSTONECRAFT, MARY, Vindication of the Rights of Woman. 66. SMITH, ADAM, The Wealth of Nations. 2v. (Everyman Library.) Selections. 12. WILLIAMS, bk. II, chs. 14-15. 41. HOFFDING, sections on the eighteenth century. 11. FAURE, vol. IV, chs. 5-6. 37. GRAY, chs. 11-12. GROUP X. EUROPE IN THE NINETEENTH CENTURY 8. BREASTED and ROBINSON, vol. II, chs. 22-28. 5. WELLS, chs. 38-39. 58. TAINE, Origins of Contemporary France. vol. V, The Modern Regime, pp. 1-90. 67. LUDWIG, E., Napoleon. 68. BRANDES, G., Main Currents of 19th Century Literature. 6v. *69. GOETHE, Faust. 70. ECKERMANN, Conversations with Goethe. 71. HEINE, Poems. Trans. Louis Untermeyer. 34. TAINE, History of English Literature, bks. IV-V. *72. KEATS, Poems. *73. SHELLEY, Poems. *74. BYRON, Poems. 44. FAGUET, sections on the nineteenth century. 75. BALZAC, Père Goriot. *76. FLAUBERT, Works. I-vol. ed. Esp. Mme. Bovary and Salambo. 77. HUGO, Les Miserables. 78. FRANCE, ANATOLE, Penguin Isle. 79. TENNYSON, Poems. 80. DICKENS, Pickwick Papers. 81. THACKERAY, Vanity Fair. 82. TURGENEV, Fathers and Sons. 83. DOSTOIEVSKI, The Brothers Karamazov. 84. TOLSTOI, War and Peace. 85. IBSEN, Peer Gynt. 12. WILLIAMS, bks. III-IV 86. DARWIN, Descent of Man. 41. HOFFDING, sections on the nineteenth century. 87. BUCKLE, Introduction to the History of Civilization in England. Esp. part I, chs. 1-5, 15. 88. SCHOPENHAUER, Works. I-vol. ed. 89. NIETZSCHE, Thus Spake Zarathustra. 11. FAURE, vol. IV, chs. 7-8. 37. GRAY, chs. 13-17. GROUP XI. AMERICA *90. BEARD, C. and M., The Rise of American Civilization. 2v. 91. POE, Poems and Tales. 92. EMERSON, Essays. 93. THOREAU, Walden. *94. WHITMAN, Leaves of Grass. 95. LINCOLN, Letters and Speeches. GROUP XII. THE TWENTIETH CENTURY 8. BREASTED and ROBINSON, vol. II, chs. 29-30. 5. WELLS, chs. 40-41. 96. ROLLAND, R. Jean Christophe. 2v. *97. ELLIS, H., Studies in the Psychology of Sex. vols. I, II, III, VI. *98. ADAMS, H., The Education of Henry Adams. 99. BERGSON, Creative Evolution. *100. SPENGLER, O., Decline of the West. 2v. 30 Jan 2015 @ 07:41 by Ari @193.109.166.219 : ZFJnSSneYhr Have you ever considered adnidg more videos to your blog posts to keep the readers more entertained? I mean I just read through the entire article of yours and it was quite good but since Im more of a visual learner,I found that to be more helpful well let me know how it turns out! I love what you guys are always up too. Such clever work and reporting! Keep up the great works guys Ive added you guys to my blogroll. This is a great article thanks for sharing this informative information.. I will visit your blog regularly for some latest post. Other entries in Information 8 Oct 2005 @ 11:39: shake rattle & roll 9 Aug 2005 @ 04:11: The science of the Antahkarana 12 Jan 2005 @ 06:16: The Third Secret 4 Aug 2004 @ 22:14: water water everywhere 13 May 2003 @ 05:46: tie a yellow ribbon round the old oak tree 18 Mar 2003 @ 05:33: What do the numbers say?
|