Mention767040
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so:description | Chapter XIV Dilettantism (en) |
so:description | Chapter XXXI The Grammar of Science (en) |
so:description | Chapter XIX Chaos (en) |
so:description | Chapter XVIII Free Fight (en) |
so:description | Chapter XXI Twenty Years After (en) |
so:description | ;Preface (en) |
so:description | Chapter IX Foes or Friends (en) |
so:description | Chapter V Berlin (en) |
so:description | Chapter XIII The Perfection of Human Society (en) |
so:description | Chapter XXVII Teufelsdröckh (en) |
so:description | Chapter III Washington (en) |
so:description | Chapter XXIII Silence (en) |
so:description | Chapter XXVI Twilight (en) |
so:description | Chapter XXXV Nunc Age (en) |
so:description | Chapter XV Darwinism (en) |
so:description | Chapter X Political Morality (en) |
so:description | Chapter XII Eccentricity (en) |
so:isPartOf | https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Henry_Adams |
so:description | Chapter XX Failure (en) |
so:description | Chapter XXVIII The Height of Knowledge (en) |
so:description | Chapter XXXII Vis Nova (en) |
so:description | Chapter XI The Battle of the Rams (en) |
so:description | Chapter XXXIV A Law of Acceleration (en) |
so:description | Chapter II Boston (en) |
so:description | Chapter XXX Vis Inertiae (en) |
so:description | Chapter VIII Diplomacy (en) |
so:description | Chapter XVI The Press (en) |
so:description | Chapter XXV The Dynamo and the Virgin (en) |
so:description | Chapter VI Rome (en) |
so:description | Chapter XXII Chicago (en) |
so:description | Chapter I Quincy (en) |
so:description | The Education of Henry Adams (1907) (en) |
so:description | Chapter VII Treason (en) |
so:description | Chapter XXXIII A Dynamic Theory of History (en) |
so:description | Capter IV Harvard College (en) |
so:description | Chapter XXIV Indian Summer (en) |
so:description | Chapter XXIX The Abyss of Ignorance (en) |
so:text | The Trusts and Corporations stood for the larger part of the new power that had been created since 1840, and were obnoxious because of their vigorous and unscrupulous energy. They were revolutionary, troubling all the old conventions and values, as the screws of ocean steamers must trouble a school of herring. They tore society to pieces and trampled it under foot. (en) |
so:description | Chapter XVII President Grant (en) |
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