Eclectic Magazine, and Monthly Edition of the Living Age, Volume 40;Volume 103John Holmes Agnew, Walter Hilliard Bidwell Leavitt, Throw and Company, 1884 |
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Pagina 5
... action in the brain . D. Then , if I understand you rightly , if the chemical changes which have been taking place for some years past in his brain had liberated a different set of forces , we should have had altogether a different ...
... action in the brain . D. Then , if I understand you rightly , if the chemical changes which have been taking place for some years past in his brain had liberated a different set of forces , we should have had altogether a different ...
Pagina 13
... action of the insects . The attraction of perfume and honey , the devices of adaption and modification , by which plants allure or detain their insect visi- tors , must be taken for granted , and we must pass on to our proper subject of ...
... action of the insects . The attraction of perfume and honey , the devices of adaption and modification , by which plants allure or detain their insect visi- tors , must be taken for granted , and we must pass on to our proper subject of ...
Pagina 14
... action in all the ends of the nerves , and would therefore produce exactly the same general sensations . But if in cer- tain eyes there was the slightest ten- dency for some of the nerve - terminals to respond specially to the ...
... action in all the ends of the nerves , and would therefore produce exactly the same general sensations . But if in cer- tain eyes there was the slightest ten- dency for some of the nerve - terminals to respond specially to the ...
Pagina 17
... action upon the hues of insects them- selves . For we probably owe the ex- quisite wings of the butterfly and the gorgeous burnished bronze of the rose- beetle to the very same sense and the very same selective action which has produced ...
... action upon the hues of insects them- selves . For we probably owe the ex- quisite wings of the butterfly and the gorgeous burnished bronze of the rose- beetle to the very same sense and the very same selective action which has produced ...
Pagina 19
... action of insects in fertilizing most frequently those flowers which offered them the easiest indication of where to go for food . Unless insects noticed them , nay more , noticed them closely and accu- rately , they could never have ...
... action of insects in fertilizing most frequently those flowers which offered them the easiest indication of where to go for food . Unless insects noticed them , nay more , noticed them closely and accu- rately , they could never have ...
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Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
admiration appears beauty become believe body brain Buddhism called century character Charles Reade Christian Church color Covent Garden death dream Earl earth emotion England English existence eyes fact faith feeling Fersen force French genius George Sand German give Goethe gutta-percha hand heart Heinrich Heine honor human idea insects interest Italy Jews Judaism kind King Lady less ligion literary living look Lord marriage Matthew Arnold means ment mind modern Molière moral nature ness never night once Pall Mall Gazette passed person play poem poet poetic poetry political Polybios present Prince Prince Bismarck Princess religion Roman Rome Russia seems sense soul speak spirit style theatre Thersander things thought tion true truth whole words Wordsworth writes young