Victorian London Revealed

Victorian London Revealed

Author: Eric De Mare

Publisher: Penguin UK

Published: 2001

Total Pages: 242

ISBN-13:

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In 1872 Gustave Dore published London: A Pilgrimage, in which he captured, often from memory, the life of the world's greatest city. His London was a city of contrasts: of light and shadow, a vital, bustling metropolis which encompassed the fashionable Ladies' Mile in Hyde Park and the appalling poverty of the East End rookeries.


London

London

Author: Andrew Eames

Publisher: Houghton Mifflin

Published: 1993

Total Pages: 278

ISBN-13:

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Violent Societies

Violent Societies

Author: C. Steenkamp

Publisher: Springer

Published: 2014-10-15

Total Pages: 139

ISBN-13: 113729065X

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This book investigates the relationships between political violence, social violence and economic violence using examples from South Africa, Northern Ireland, Lebanon and Syria. It examines the cultural impact of war and argues that a culture of violence can explain the high levels of violence which are frequently found in post-war societies.


The Far Horizon

The Far Horizon

Author: Lucas Malet

Publisher: IndyPublish.com

Published: 1906

Total Pages: 404

ISBN-13:

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1906. Lucas Malet was the pen name of English novelist, Mrs. Mary St. Leger Harrison. The author's first novel since The History of Sir Richard Calmady. It begins: Dominic Iglesias stood watching while the lingering June twilight darkened into night. He was tired in body, but his mind was eminently, consciously awake, to the point of restlessness, and this was unusual with him. He had raised the lower sash of each of the three tall, narrow windows to its extreme height, since the first-floor sitting-room, though of fair proportions, appeared close. His thought refused the limits of it, and ranged outward over the expanse of Trimmer's Green, the roadway and houses bordering it, to the far northwest, that region of hurried storm, of fierce, equinoctial passion and conflict, now paved with plaques of flat, dingy, violet cloud opening on smoky rose-red wastes of London sunset. All day thunder had threatened, but had not broken. And, even yet, the face of heaven seemed less peaceful than remonstrant, a sullenness holding it as of troops in retreat denied satisfaction of imminent battle.