Externalisation, 177:of economic disaster, the fear of famine and pestilence and the constant risk of becoming activelyExternalisation, 184:and death and are forced to live underground; pestilence appears; there is no safety on land or seaHercules, 180:no crops could grow. In consequence, a blighting pestilence was sweeping through the land, wreakingHercules, 181:go by piled high with dead, the victims of the pestilence. Two rivers, he observed, the Alpheus andProblems, 171:of a planetary war, of worldwide famine and pestilence, of nation rising against nation and of thePsychology2, 630:by war, with its consequences of famine and pestilence, and in the other, worn out by the suffering |