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inauthor:"Keith Seddon" from books.google.com
In this book, readers will learn how to sustain emotional harmony and a ‘good flow of life’ whatever fortune may hold in store for them.
inauthor:"Keith Seddon" from books.google.com
This slim volume is the first of three parts of Roger L'Estrange's Seneca of a Happy Life, being itself an extract from a much larger whole, Seneca's Morals, first published in 1678.
inauthor:"Keith Seddon" from books.google.com
One student commented: 'I believe this course has changed my life, and I cannot thank you enough' -- DN, Australia. The book is illustrated with pen and ink drawings.
inauthor:"Keith Seddon" from books.google.com
The Lady of Shalott is one of the best-loved poems in the English language. The tale of the mysterious, enigmatic Lady seems to captivate everyone's imagination.
inauthor:"Keith Seddon" from books.google.com
This third slim volume is the concluding part of Roger L'Estrange's Seneca of a Happy Life, being itself an extract of a much larger whole, Seneca's Morals, first published in 1678.
inauthor:"Keith Seddon" from books.google.com
Excerpted from Diogenes Laertius' The lives and opinions of eminent philosophers, book seven.
inauthor:"Keith Seddon" from books.google.com
That first edition is presented here in facsimile, accompanied by computer-generated typesetting of the later editions, providing a 'complete edition'.
inauthor:"Keith Seddon" from books.google.com
This slim volume is the second of three parts of Roger L'Estrange's Seneca of a Happy Life, being itself an extract of a much larger whole, Seneca's Morals, first published in 1678.
inauthor:"Keith Seddon" from books.google.com
Preserved through the ages, these two fine examples of ancient wisdom literature come down to us today and are here published in this slim volume, still helpful, relevant and encouraging for the modern philosophical seeker.
inauthor:"Keith Seddon" from books.google.com
This volume is a revised translation of the complete text of Book Six about Diogenes of Sinope and the Cynics, taken from The Lives and Opinions of Eminent Philosophers written around AD 230 by the Graeco-Roman author Diogenes Laertius.