... our stories are usually separated from their divine ancestors by two or three generations'. Whatever may be the explanation of this phenomenon it is doubtless to be connected with the stories of conjugal relations between human and divine beings which... The Papal Conclaves, as They Were and as They are - 第 50 頁Thomas Adolphus Trollope 著 - 1876 - 434 頁完整檢視 - 關於此書
| Hector Munro Chadwick - 1907 - 390 頁
...beginning. Families possessing such rank may quite possibly have been fairly numerous in ancient times. But this is a subject to which we shall have to return later. If we are right in believing that the Jutes of Britain came, ultimately at least, from Jutland,... | |
| Hector Munro Chadwick - 1926 - 500 頁
...conjugal relations between human and divine beings which we find both in Greece and in northern Europe. This is a subject to which we shall have to return in a later chapter. Above all, however, we have to take account of the influence of folk-tales' and popular beliefs, which,... | |
| Hector Munro Chadwick - 1912 - 508 頁
...conjugal relations between human and divine beings which we find both in Greece and in northern Europe. This is a subject to which we shall have to return in a later chapter. Above all, however, we have to take account of the influence of folk-tales' and popular beliefs, which,... | |
| Joseph Needham - 1959 - 1146 頁
...works on the history of meteorology*1 make hardly any use of Chinese material. (A) CLIMATE IN GENERAL This is a subject to which we shall have to return in the concluding part of the book. In considering the differences between Chinese and Occidental civilisation,... | |
| Stratis Haviaras - 1984 - 504 頁
...conjugal relations between human and divine beings which we find both in Greece and in northern Europe. This is a subject to which we shall have to return in a later chapter. Above all, however, we have to take account of the influence of folk-tales' and popular beliefs, which,... | |
| Edward Augustus Freeman - 2017 - 356 頁
...beginning. Families possessing such rank may quite possibly have been fairly numerous in ancient times. But this is a subject to which we shall have to return later. If we are right in believing that the Jutes of Britain came, ultimately at least, from Jutland,... | |
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