The special irony of that situation is expressed in the novel’s epigraph from Hilaire Belloc: Be taught by this to speak with moderation, Of places where, with decent application, One gets a ...
like George Eliot’s Silas Marner and Hilaire Belloc’s The Four Men, which I feel are the heart and soul of Conn Artists live theatre work. "Our adaptation will be fast moving and inventive ...
The “Hilary Term,” now under way in courts (and Trinity College) is named for a fourth-century French saint, Hilary of Poitiers, whose feast-day falls on January 14th. He was known as Hilarius ...
The president-elect is not a known fan of writer and politician Hilaire Belloc, but he should remember the fate of the eponymous boy in the poem, “Jim” — he ran away from his nurse’s care ...
The last book he wrote was about the Sussex poet Hilaire Belloc. David was well known in the local community for creating a garden on the corner of Friars' Walk in the town centre. The old Railway ...
More usual are figures like William Cobbett, G.K. Chesterton, and Hilaire Belloc. All three were deeply inspired by the Middle Ages, though all three also had a tendency to romanticize the Revolution.