Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
English: An early 1900s bomb-making handbook titled "La salute e' in voi!" ("Health is in you!" or "Salvation is within you!") associated with the Galleanisti, followers of anarchist Luigi Galleani, particularly in the United States. Italian language. Circa 1906.
La Salute è in voi was written anonymously. [10] Its authors called themselves "the compilers" [4] and displayed a working familiarity with basic chemistry. This emphasis on science is likely owed to Ettore Molinari, a chemist and anarchist believed to have drafted an early version of the handbook, if not the full book.
In addition to its inclusion among the many translations of Catullus' collected poems, Catullus 101 is featured in Nox (2010), a book by Canadian poet and classicist Anne Carson that comes in an accordion format within a box. Nox concerns the death of Carson's own brother, to which the poem of Catullus offers a parallel. Carson provides the ...
Entrance to "Zagrebački zbor" in 1942, it served as a transit camp for shipping Jews to Ustaša extermination camps [1] [2]. Za dom spremni! (lit. ' For home – ready! ' or ' For homeland – ready! ') was a salute used during World War II by the Croatian Ustaše movement and was the motto of the Independent State of Croatia.
The book claims to tell the true story of their family lives, and each chapter is headed 'Piers' or 'Hilary', according to which author wrote it. A film, Hilary and Jackie, was made in 1998 telling essentially the same story, but did not mirror details of events as recounted in the book. The film and the book were both developed simultaneously.
The book was very popular and was widely discussed in the Basque Country. [5]In Spanish it has been read by more than one million readers, and has been translated into English (as Homeland, Pantheon Publishers 2019), German (with 80,000 books sold), Italian (60,000 books), Greek, and Catalan.
A salut d'amor [a] (Occitan: [saˈlyd daˈmuɾ], Catalan: [səˈlud dəˈmoɾ, saˈlud daˈmoɾ]; "love letter", lit. "greeting of love") or (e)pistola ("epistle") was an Occitan lyric poem of the troubadours, written as a letter from one lover to another in the tradition of courtly love.
(Spanish: ¡Qué linda es mi familia! ) is a 1980 Argentine comedy film directed by Palito Ortega and starring Luis Sandrini and Niní Marshall . [ 1 ] It was the final film of the comedian Marshall, who had made her screen debut in 1938.