
The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People (Les 7 habitudes de ceux qui réalisent tout ce qu'ils entrep
Stephen Covey
GARDNERS
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9780762408337
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Catégories
| Nombre de pages | 96 |
|---|---|
| Date de parution | 05/09/2000 |
| Poids | 300g |
Plus d'informations
| EAN | 9780762408337 |
|---|---|
| Titre | The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People (Les 7 habitudes de ceux qui réalisent tout ce qu'ils entrep |
| Auteur | Stephen Covey |
| Editeur | GARDNERS |
| Largeur | 0 |
| Poids | 300 |
| Date de parution | 20000905 |
| Nombre de pages | 96,00 € |
| Disponibilité | En stock |
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Goddard RobertExtrait Chapter OneChildhood memories fit their own intricate pattern. They cannot be made to conform to the version of our past we try to impose upon them. Thus I could say that Lord and Lady Powerstock and the home they gave me at Meongate more than compensated for being an orphan, that a silver spoon easily took the place of my mother's smile. I could say it--but every recollection of my early years would deny it.Meongate must once have been the crowded, bustling house of a cheerful family, as the Hallowses must once have been that family. Every favour of nature in its setting where the Hampshire downs met the pastures of the Meon valley, every effort of man in its spacious rooms and landscaped park, had been bestowed on the home of one small child.Yet it was not enough. When I was growing up at Meongate in the early 1920s, most of its grandeur had long since departed. Many of the rooms were shut up and disused, much of the park turned over to farmland. 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She had drawn some venom from whatever part she had played in the past of that house and had reserved it for me.My only friend in those days, my only guide through Meongate's hidden perils, was Fergus, the taciturn and undemonstrative major-domo, "shifty" as Olivia described him and certainly not as deferential as he should have been, but none the less my sole confidant. Sally, the sullen maid, and humourless Nanny Hiles both went in awe of Olivia, but Fergus treated her with an assurance, bordering on disrespect, that made him my immediate ally. A cautious, solitary, pessimistic man who had expected little from life and consequently been spared many disappointments, perhaps he took pity on a lonely child whose plight he understood better than she did herself. 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