Blackwood's Magazine, Volume 96W. Blackwood, 1864 - England |
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Page 111
... appears that you and I have a word to say to each other . " They had all risen when the other gentlemen followed Mr Morgan out of the room , and those who remained stood in a group surrounding the unhappy culprit , and renewing his ...
... appears that you and I have a word to say to each other . " They had all risen when the other gentlemen followed Mr Morgan out of the room , and those who remained stood in a group surrounding the unhappy culprit , and renewing his ...
Page 150
... appear to him probable and cohe- rent ? That Aristotle was , in the language of our times , a gentleman of birth and fortune , who , simply from an ardent love of knowledge , devoted himself to philosophy ; that , born at Stagira , a ...
... appear to him probable and cohe- rent ? That Aristotle was , in the language of our times , a gentleman of birth and fortune , who , simply from an ardent love of knowledge , devoted himself to philosophy ; that , born at Stagira , a ...
Page 153
... appears to be very encomias- tic in his annotations . Mr Lewes , while admitting that all has been done that could be expected of an observer who had no thermometer , no barometer , no hygrometer , no anemometer , no instrument of any ...
... appears to be very encomias- tic in his annotations . Mr Lewes , while admitting that all has been done that could be expected of an observer who had no thermometer , no barometer , no hygrometer , no anemometer , no instrument of any ...
Page 158
... appears to us that if anywhere a line of demarcation can be drawn of this kind — namely , here , at this point , in a world , in an organism previously prepared for it , enters a quite new property -it is precisely a line drawn be ...
... appears to us that if anywhere a line of demarcation can be drawn of this kind — namely , here , at this point , in a world , in an organism previously prepared for it , enters a quite new property -it is precisely a line drawn be ...
Page 162
... appear to the mind's eye in its true and full reality : -such reality as the senses are cognisant of . We should see it clearly . To earn for us this intellec- tual perception is the great but yet limited task of the man of science ...
... appear to the mind's eye in its true and full reality : -such reality as the senses are cognisant of . We should see it clearly . To earn for us this intellec- tual perception is the great but yet limited task of the man of science ...
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able Alice amount Aristotle army Bank better boys Butler Caffarelli called Carlingford character Christian Church College coup d'état course Couza cried dear doubt England English Eton Europe eyes fact favour feel follow give gold Government hand head heart honour human knew Lady Lady Eastlake language less living look Lord Lord Palmerston Lucy M'Caskey Maitland matter Max Müller McClellan means ment mind Naples nation nature never officers once passed perhaps Perpetual Curate poor position present Prince question Rector's wife Rugby seems Skeff Skelmersdale sort speak spirit St Alban's Hall suppose sure tain tell thing thought tion told Tony Tony Butler trade truth ture Victor Hugo Wallachia Wentworth Whately whole words XCVI.-NO young