| Ariela Halkin - 1995 - 232 sayfa
[ Maalesef, bu sayfanın içeriği kısıtlanmıştır ] | |
| Ian Buruma - 1998 - 332 sayfa
[ Maalesef, bu sayfanın içeriği kısıtlanmıştır ] | |
| Peter Hunt - 2001 - 360 sayfa
[ Maalesef, bu sayfanın içeriği kısıtlanmıştır ] | |
| Elizabeth Langland - 2002 - 204 sayfa
...understood, is the business, the real, highest, honestest business of every son of man" (218). Further, "fighting with fists is the natural and English way for English boys to settle their quarrels" (231). And finally, "if you do fight, fight it out; and don't give in while you can stand and see"... | |
| Mike Huggins, J. A. Mangan - 2004 - 286 sayfa
...Thomas Hughes, of course, provided the moral licence for public schoolboys to beat each other senseless: 'Fighting with fists is the natural and English way for English boys to settle their quarrels.'95 He urged his youthful readers to 'learn to box, then, as you leam to play cricket and... | |
| Valeria Tinkler-Villani - 2005 - 326 sayfa
...Tom Brown's Schooldays (1857) describes an exemplary fight of honour, and Hughes concludes, "Fighting is the natural and English way for English boys to settle their quarrels".7 The Amateur Boxing Association was set up in London in 1880 to encourage schoolboy contests... | |
| Margaret Markwick - 2007 - 238 sayfa
...his salt has enemies who must be beaten',15 or recommending settling a dispute with a boxing match: 'Fighting with fists is the natural and English way for English boys to settle their quarrels.' The adult narrative voice refers to a contemporary debate on the subject in The Times as 'cant and... | |
| |