| Grace Iopolo - 2003 - 192 pages
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| Grace Ioppolo - 2003 - 192 pages
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| Grace Ioppolo - 2003 - 192 pages
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| William R. Jordan - 2003 - 272 pages
...his extremity the desperate futility of such counsel. our basest beggars Are in the poorest things superfluous: Allow not nature more than nature needs, Man's life is cheap as beast's. King Lear, 2.4.264-67 As for the gift and the step into a solidarity with nature, the idea of nature's... | |
| David Hawkes - 2003 - 225 pages
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| Michael LaBlanc - 2003 - 472 pages
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| Eugenio Picano - 2003 - 512 pages
...superfluous flow reserve, which can be recruited by the appropriate pharmacological stimulus: “Oh! Reason not the need: our basest beggars are in the poorest thing superfluous” (Shakespeare, King Lear, II, IV, 262—263). NuclearTechniques for the Identification of Myocardial... | |
| English Lady - 2004 - 360 pages
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| 1984 - 456 pages
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