| Daniel Balderston - History - 1993 - 238 pages
...161)34 6 Going Native: Beyond Civilization and Savagery in "Historia del guerrero y de la cautiva" We imperceptibly advance from youth to age without...if it were possible, after a momentary slumber of two hundrcd years, to display the new world to the eyes of a spectator who still retained a lively... | |
| Rosamond McKitterick, Roland Quinault - History - 1997 - 56 pages
...auspices of the Royal Historical Society, Gibbon's phrases at the end of chapter 33 seemed especially apt: We imperceptibly advance from youth to age without...if it were possible, after a momentary slumber of two hundred years, to display the new world to the eyes of a spectator who still retained a lively... | |
| Peter Cosgrove - Biography & Autobiography - 1999 - 300 pages
...so expressive of the sense of mankind, may be ascribed to the genuine merit of the fable itself, ... if the interval between two memorable eras could be...if it were possible, after a momentary slumber of two hundred years, to display the new world to the eyes of a spectator who still retained a lively... | |
| J. G. A. Pocock - History - 2005 - 552 pages
...found asking this question.53 (IV) 'In our larger experience of history,' Gibbon wrote at a later date, 'the imagination is accustomed, by a perpetual series of causes and effects, to unite the most distant revolutions.'54 It is possible that this is not quite how the ancient historians operated. They could... | |
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