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Nelson : Horatio Nelson (1758-1805), 1st Viscount Nelson, British naval commander who defeated Revolutionary & Napoleonic France in the battle of Nile & Trafalgar.

16 result/s found for Nelson

... Baroda] the students besides taking my notes used to get notes of some professor from Bombay, especially if any of them was to be an examiner. "Once I was giving a lecture on Southey's Life of Nelson . My lecture was not in agreement with the notes. So the students remarked that it was not at all like what was found in the notes. I replied: I have not read the notes – in any case they are all rubbish... The moment passed and all was as before; Only that 1 deathless memory I bore. ² In 1902 Sri Aurobindo was occupied in teaching French and English at the college. Southey's Life of Nelson and Burke's ¹ Alternate reading: its. ². Sri Aurobindo, Collected Poems (Pondicherry: Sri Aurobindo Ashram, 1972), p. 138. Page 52 reflections on the French ...

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... it will breathe life into dry bones. Let the inspiring life be lived and it will produce workers by thousands. England draws her inspiration from the names of Shakespeare and Milton, Mill and Bacon, Nelson and Wellington. They did not visit the sickroom, they did not do philanthropic work in the parishes, they did not work spinning jennies in Manchester, they did not produce cutlery in Sheffield, but ...

Sri Aurobindo   >   Books   >   CWSA   >   Bande Mataram
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... 'Périple de la mer Érythrée'", Journal Asiatique, CCXLIX, Fascicule No. 4, 1961 Plutarch, Life of Alexander Powell-Price, J. C, A History of India (Thomas Nelson, London, 1955) Pradhan, S. N., The Chronology of Ancient India (Calcutta, 1927) Proceedings of the Indian History Congress, III Przyluski. J., "Nouveaux Aspects de ...

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... creative activity. But political figures have had some famous handicaps. Choosing in all fields one need only think of Milton, who was Page 464 blind, Beethoven, who became deaf, or Lord Nelson, who, mutilated by wounds, had to fight pain all his life. Julius Caesar suffered from epilepsy, Alexander the Great was a drunkard, and Nietzsche died insane. Gibbon had a famous hydrocele, Marat ...

... surprising to me was that the students used to take down everything verbatim and mug it up. Such a thing would never have happened in England.... Once I was giving a lecture on Southey's Life of Nelson and my lecture was not in agreement with the notes. So the students remarked that it was not at all like what was found in them. I replied that I had not read the notes — in any case, they were all ...

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... surprising to me was that the students used to take down everything verbatim and mug it up. Such a thing would never have happened in England.... Once I was giving a lecture on Southey's Life of Nelson. My lecture was not in agreement with the notes. So the students 13. Sri K.M. Munshi, ex-governor of the Uttar Pradesh, who was one of the students of Sri Aurobindo at the Baroda College ...

... end of the 1st century A.D., both the early Church and Christian literature in general were more deeply influenced by Matthew's Gospel than by any other book (New Testament Introduction, London: Nelson; New York: Herder & Herder, 1958, p. 198). Page 152 standards; and so, sweeping statements about the inerrancy of the Bible are inapplicable. Biblical fiction and parable (books ...

... more, Sandrocottus "extended his empire beyond the frontiers of India up to the borders of Persia". In other 1. Chandragupta Maurya and His Times, p. 50. 2. A History of India (Thomas Nelson, London, 1955), p. 38. 3.Op. cit., pp. 59-60. 4. The Gupta Empire, p. 69. Page 525 words, the war with Seleucus won for him the territories lying westward along ...

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... Marcion's error [in opposing certain orthodox doctrines* ]____J. Knox 5 believes that   * Under "Marcionism" The Catholic Encyclopedia by Robert C. Brod-erick (Nashville-Camden-New York: Thomas Nelson, 1976), p. 371, col. 1 says: "Begun in 144 by Marcion, this was the heresy that held that the God of the Jews was not the God of the Christians nor the Father of Christ...." Page 116 ...

... founded his empire upon love; and at this hour millions of men would die for him" (Monser, 503, 508). Kennedy, James and Newcomb, Jerry (1994), What If Jesus Had Never Been Born? (Nashville: Thomas Nelson). The basic reason accepted by the Early Christians for the crucifixion was that God loved man so much, that he sent his only son, Jesus, as a sacrifice that would atone* for the sins committed ...

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... view. The students at Baroda, besides taking my notes, used to get notes of other professors from Bombay, specially if he was an examiner.. Once I was giving a lecture on Southey's Life of Nelson, and my lecture was not in agreement with the notes. So the students remarked that it was not at all like what was found in them. I, replied that I had Page 211 not read notes; ...

... In India the students, besides taking down my notes, used to get notes of professors from Bombay, especially if they happened to be examiners. Once I was giving a lecture on Southey's Life of Nelson . And my lecture was not in agreement with the notes in the book. So the students remarked that it was not at all like what was in the notes. I replied that I hadn't read them. In any case, they are ...

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... at Baroda the students besides taking my notes used to get notes of some professor from Bombay, especially if any of them was to be an examiner. "Once I was giving a lecture on Southey's Life of Nelson. My lecture was not in agreement with the notes. So the students remarked that it was not at all like what was found in the notes. I replied: 'I have not read the notes - in any case they are all ...

... professor". He had his sense of the text before him, he seized the meaning by direct intuitive grasp, and spoke as his mind and the moment directed him. Once while giving a lecture on Southey's Life of Nelson he said things not in agreement with what was given in the Notes of the edition being used by the students. When they brought this to his attention, he replied that he hadn't looked into the Notes ...

... students at Baroda, besides taking my notes, used to get notes of other professors from Bombay, especially if they happened to be examiners. "Once I was giving a lecture on Southey's Life of Nelson, Page 204 Sri Aurobindo as a professor in Baroda and my lecture was not in agreement with the Notes in the book. So the students remarked that it was not at ...

... for a short time until I saw my way more clearly on certain important matters; but I now believe this is not necessary and it will be as well for you to come as soon as may be. I hardly suppose that Nelson's curious reservation about your visit means anything serious; otherwise he would have been more positive about it. I take it that they do not like the idea and would be suspicious about its motive ...