Leisure ReadingsWyman & Sons, 1883 - 344 páginas |
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Página 18
... mean , I venture to point out , that fifteen years hence the comet of 1843 falling into the sun will so raise his heat that all of us will be destroyed . I may remark that the newspaper announcement has elicited various expressions of ...
... mean , I venture to point out , that fifteen years hence the comet of 1843 falling into the sun will so raise his heat that all of us will be destroyed . I may remark that the newspaper announcement has elicited various expressions of ...
Página 41
... means the slaves of Archbishop Ussher's chronology , are as yet willing to allow : Between the Older and the Newer Stone Ages there is fixed the great gulf of climatal change and of altered distribution in land and water ; for while the ...
... means the slaves of Archbishop Ussher's chronology , are as yet willing to allow : Between the Older and the Newer Stone Ages there is fixed the great gulf of climatal change and of altered distribution in land and water ; for while the ...
Página 73
... means for determining the solid or gaseous condition of the sun , the stars , and the nebulæ . In this paper he established experimentally that all solid substances , and probably liquids , become incandescent at the same temperature ...
... means for determining the solid or gaseous condition of the sun , the stars , and the nebulæ . In this paper he established experimentally that all solid substances , and probably liquids , become incandescent at the same temperature ...
Página 78
... means by which , directly or indirectly , all observations are made , and science can only make real advance in so far as it is based on observation and experiment . It is most important , therefore , that either our senses should be ...
... means by which , directly or indirectly , all observations are made , and science can only make real advance in so far as it is based on observation and experiment . It is most important , therefore , that either our senses should be ...
Página 81
... mean is , that they judge that certain sensations of touch , hearing , or sight , of which they were conscious , were caused by such and such things . " It is precisely this lesson which I want to enforce here . The simplest illusions ...
... mean is , that they judge that certain sensations of touch , hearing , or sight , of which they were conscious , were caused by such and such things . " It is precisely this lesson which I want to enforce here . The simplest illusions ...
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Términos y frases comunes
Aëtius American ancient appear betting bones bookmakers Bretwalda Britain British Britons called caverns Ceawlin century Cerdic certainly character circle cloth comet conquest consider course Crown 8vo curved Cynric dark Datchery deposits descended Dickens doubt Durdles earth Edwin Drood effect Egbert England English Englishman Ethelbald Europe evidence fact Fcap figure fire flint Gildas Hengist horse illusion illustrated infer instance Jasper king language less light limb lines look luck lunar manifestly matter means Mercia moon Mystery of Edwin nature myth Neolithic Neville night Norman nursery rhymes observed odds Palæolithic passing persons post-free present probably PROCTOR pronounced pronunciation race rays reader recognised referred regarded reign remains Roman Sapsea Saxon says seems solar speak spectrum stalagmite stars Stone Age story sun's supposed tail Thammuz tion trace Typhon Vritra wagers Wilkie words Wyman & Sons
Pasajes populares
Página 171 - No; were I at the strappado, or all the racks in the world, I would not tell you on compulsion. Give you a reason on compulsion ! if reasons were as plenty as blackberries, I would give no man a reason upon compulsion, I. P.
Página 53 - Into this Universe, and Why not knowing Nor Whence, like Water willy-nilly flowing ; And out of it, as Wind along the Waste, I know not Whither, willy-nilly blowing.
Página 248 - Then came the Holy One, blessed be He ! And killed the Angel of Death, That killed the butcher, That slew the ox, That drank the water, That quenched the fire, That burned the staff, That beat the dog, That bit the cat, That ate the kid That my father bought For two pieces of money: A kid, a kid.
Página 111 - At the tirst, the piles which bear up the platforms were fixed in their places by the whole body of the citizens ; but since that time the custom which has prevailed about fixing them is this...
Página 171 - She was a wight, if ever such wight were, To suckle fools and chronicle small beer.
Página 232 - East and west without a breath Mix their dim lights like life and death To broaden into boundless day.
Página 154 - English." (This, be it noticed, is a quarter of a century after the victory of Deorham, 577, which, according to Mr. Green, made the conquest of the English part of Britain complete), insomuch that he might be compared to Saul once king of the Israelites, excepting only in this, that he was ignorant of the true religion ; for he conquered more territories from the Britons, either making them tributary, or driving the inhabitants clean out and planting English in their places, than any other king...
Página 114 - man is a tool-using animal (Hanthierendes Thier). Weak in himself, and of small stature, he stands on a basis, at most, for the flattest-soled, of some half square-foot, insecurely enough; has to straddle out his legs, lest the very wind supplant him. Feeblest of bipeds! Three quintals are a crushing load for him; the steer of the meadow tosses him aloft, like a waste rag. Nevertheless he can use tools, can devise tools. With these the...
Página 129 - So far as the conquest had yet gone it had been complete. Not a Briton remained as subject or slave on English ground. Sullenly, inch by inch, the beaten men drew back from the land which their conquerors had won; and eastward of the border line which the English sword had drawn all was now purely English.
Página 47 - ... even in those formed in the immediate proximity of land inhabited by millions of human beings, we shall be prepared for the general dearth of human memorials in glacial formations, whether recent, pleistocene, or of more ancient date. If there were a few wanderers over lands covered with glaciers, or over seas infested with icebergs, and if a few of them left their bones or weapons in moraines or in marine drifts, the chances, after the lapse of thousands of years, of a geologist meeting with...