Crossword clues for manifestoes
manifestoes
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Manifesto \Man`i*fes"to\, n.; pl. Manifestoes. [It. manifesto.
See Manifest, n. & a.]
A public declaration, usually of a prince, sovereign, or
other person claiming large powers, showing his intentions,
or proclaiming his opinions and motives in reference to some
act done or contemplated by him; as, a manifesto declaring
the purpose of a prince to begin war, and explaining his
motives.
--Bouvier.
it was proposed to draw up a manifesto, setting forth
the grounds and motives of our taking arms.
--Addison.
Frederick, in a public manifesto, appealed to the
Empire against the insolent pretensions of the pope.
--Milman.
Wiktionary
n. (plural of manifesto English)
WordNet
n. a public declaration of intentions (as issued by a political party or government) [syn: pronunciamento]
[also: manifestoes (pl)]
See manifesto
Usage examples of "manifestoes".
Andreae spent the rest of his life swearing he hadn’t written die manifestoes, which he claimed were a lusus, a ludibrium, a prank.
Once the manifestoes appeared, it was as if people had been waiting for them.
One fine morning in 1623, Rosicrucian manifestoes appeared on the walls of Paris, informing the good citizens that the deputies of the confraternity’s chief college had moved to their city and were ready to accept applications.
But according to another version, the manifestoes came right out and said there were thirty-six invisibles scattered through the world in groups of six, and that they had the power to make their adepts invisible.
By the time he got back to Paris, the manifestoes had appeared, and he learned mat everybody considered him a Rosicrucian.
In the Chemical Wedding, written by Andreae in his youth, hence before the manifestoes (even if they appeared as early as 1614), three majestic temples were mentioned, the three places that must already have been known.
It was becoming obvious to me that the manifestoes were written because some information had been lost.
They agreed that the secret meaning of the manifestoes should be clear even to a Diabolical.
In the space of a year, the Rosicrucian manifestoes come out: the appeal that the English Templars, with the help of their German friends, are making to all Europe, to reunite the lines of the interrupted Plan.
From the appearance of the manifestoes until about 1621, the Rosicrucians receive too many replies.
It had met in 1573, only eleven years before 1584, probably to prepare, along with the English, the Paris journey, but after the business of the Rosicrucian manifestoes it meets again, to decide what line to take, whether to join the English operation or try a different path.
Then, from scattered references, certain phrases, putting two and two together, I saw that the author of the Rosicrucian manifestoes was really he.
Verulam gives obscene blows of triumphant bestiality with his groin against the frame, miming the events of the celestial orbs in the domain of the decans in order to understand the ultimate secrets of the Great Establishment and the secret of the New Atlantis itself, which he calls Gottlieb’s, parodying the sacred language of the manifestoes attributed to Andreae.
The idea that Bacon was the author of the Rosicrucian manifestoes he had already come upon somewhere or other.
Yet also, parallel with these announcements, these prophecies, the gynecological manifestoes, parallel and contemporaneous with them new totem poles, new taboos, new war dances.