万本电子书0元读

万本电子书0元读

Szívhang 476. (Rómeó doktor választása)
Szívhang 476. (Rómeó doktor választása)
Laura Iding
¥18.56
Szívhang 476. (Rómeó doktor választása)
Szívhang 470. (A londoni látogató)
Szívhang 470. (A londoni látogató)
Maggie Kingsley
¥18.56
Szívhang 470. (A londoni látogató)
Romana 522. (A sivatag ura)
Romana 522. (A sivatag ura)
Susan Stephens
¥18.56
Romana 522. (A sivatag ura)
Júlia 530. (V?r?s hajú veszedelem)
Júlia 530. (V?r?s hajú veszedelem)
Carole Mortimer
¥18.56
Júlia 530. (V?r?s hajú veszedelem)
Romana 517. (Egy éjszaka Hongkongban)
Romana 517. (Egy éjszaka Hongkongban)
Robyn Donald
¥18.56
Romana 517. (Egy éjszaka Hongkongban)
Romana 516. (Nyered, ha mered)
Romana 516. (Nyered, ha mered)
Helen Bianchin
¥18.56
Romana 516. (Nyered, ha mered)
Szívhang 459. (Híd a szívedhez)
Szívhang 459. (Híd a szívedhez)
Fiona Lowe
¥18.56
Szívhang 459. (Híd a szívedhez)
Romana 513. (Esküv? a kastélyban)
Romana 513. (Esküv? a kastélyban)
Jessica Hart
¥18.56
Romana 513. (Esküv? a kastélyban)
Flamenco és fakanál
Flamenco és fakanál
Susan Stephens
¥18.56
Flamenco és fakanál
A kaszinó szépe
A kaszinó szépe
Michelle Conder
¥18.56
A kaszinó szépe
Olthatatlan lángok
Olthatatlan lángok
Barbara McMahon
¥18.56
Olthatatlan lángok
Szomszéd, f?n?k… szeret??
Szomszéd, f?n?k… szeret??
Caroline Anderson
¥18.56
Szomszéd, f?n?k… szeret??
Déltengeri szenvedély
Déltengeri szenvedély
Alison Roberts
¥18.56
Déltengeri szenvedély
Kül?n?s házasságszerz?
Kül?n?s házasságszerz?
Lucy Gordon
¥18.56
Kül?n?s házasságszerz?
Romana 546. (Szívem zsarnoka)
Romana 546. (Szívem zsarnoka)
Caitlin Crews
¥18.56
Romana 546. (Szívem zsarnoka)
Romana 588. (Hazárdjáték a szerelemmel)
Romana 588. (Hazárdjáték a szerelemmel)
Trish Morey
¥18.56
Romana 588. (Hazárdjáték a szerelemmel)
Júlia 523. (Boldog karácsonyt, Mrs. Carter!)
Júlia 523. (Boldog karácsonyt, Mrs. Carter!)
Helen Brooks
¥18.56
Júlia 523. (Boldog karácsonyt, Mrs. Carter!)
Romana 518. (Kinek kell a szerelem?)
Romana 518. (Kinek kell a szerelem?)
Sara Craven
¥18.56
Romana 518. (Kinek kell a szerelem?)
Szívhang 458. (Fehér k?peny, b? szoknya)
Szívhang 458. (Fehér k?peny, b? szoknya)
Margaret McDonagh
¥18.56
Szívhang 458. (Fehér k?peny, b? szoknya)
Romana 514. (Hármas ikrek karácsonyra)
Romana 514. (Hármas ikrek karácsonyra)
Kathryn Springer
¥18.56
Romana 514. (Hármas ikrek karácsonyra)
Theodore Roosevelt
Theodore Roosevelt
Henry Cabot Lodge
¥18.56
Theodore Roosevelt had the good fortune to be born of a well-known, long-established family, with every facility for education and with an atmosphere of patriotism and disinterested service both to country and humanity all about him. In his father he had before him an example of lofty public spirit, from which it would have been difficult to depart. But if the work of his ancestors relieved him from the hard struggle which meets an unaided man at the outset, he also lacked the spur of necessity to prick the sides of his intent, in itself no small loss. As a balance to the opportunity which was his without labor, he had not only the later difficulties which come to him to whom fate has been kind at the start; he had also spread before him the temp-tations inseparable from such inherited advantages as fell to his lot—temptations to a life of sports and pleasure, to lettered ease, to an amateur's career in one of the fine arts, perhaps to a money-making business, likewise an inheritance, none of them easily to be set aside in obedience to the stern rule that the larger and more facile the opportunity the greater and more insistent the responsibility. ? About Author: ? henry Cabot Lodge (May 12, 1850 – November 9, 1924) was an American Republican Senator and historian from Massachusetts. Lodge received his PhD in history from Harvard. Lodge was a long-time friend and confidant of Theodore Roosevelt. Lodge had the role (but not the official title) of the first Senate Majority Leader. He is best known for his positions on foreign policy, especially his battle with President Woodrow Wilson in 1919 over the Treaty of Versailles. Lodge demanded Congressional control of declarations of war; Wilson refused and blocked Lodge's move to ratify the treaty with reservations. As a result, the United States never joined the League of Nations.Historian George E. Mowry argues that: Henry Cabot Lodge was one of the best informed statesmen of his time, he was an excellent parliamentarian, and he brought to bear on foreign questions a mind that was at once razor sharp and devoid of much of the moral cant that was so typical of the age....[Yet] Lodge never made the contributions he should have made, largely because of Lodge the person. He was opportunistic, selfish, jealous, condescending, supercilious, and could never resist calling his opponent's spade a dirty shovel. Small wonder that except for Roosevelt and Root, most of his colleagues of both parties disliked him, and many distrusted him. * * *