My Life: A Record of Events and Opinions, 2. köideDodd, Mead, 1905 |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 94
Page 11
... present I feel sick of everything , and if I could occupy my time and forget my daily discomforts , or rather miseries , I would never publish another word . But I shall cheer up , I dare say , soon , having only just got over a bad ...
... present I feel sick of everything , and if I could occupy my time and forget my daily discomforts , or rather miseries , I would never publish another word . But I shall cheer up , I dare say , soon , having only just got over a bad ...
Page 13
... present any evidence of their being thus carried more than a few miles . " This is the most connected piece of criticism in the notes , and I therefore give it verbatim . My general reply is printed in " More Letters , " vol . iii . p ...
... present any evidence of their being thus carried more than a few miles . " This is the most connected piece of criticism in the notes , and I therefore give it verbatim . My general reply is printed in " More Letters , " vol . iii . p ...
Page 14
... present . I also have just finished a book which has interested me greatly , but whether it would interest any one else I know not . It is the Creed of Science , ' by W. Graham , A.M. Who or what he is I know not , but he discusses many ...
... present . I also have just finished a book which has interested me greatly , but whether it would interest any one else I know not . It is the Creed of Science , ' by W. Graham , A.M. Who or what he is I know not , but he discusses many ...
Page 23
... present . We did not yet know enough of matter in its essential constitution nor of the various forces of nature ; and all he could say was that everything pointed to its having been a development out 23 CHAPTER XXVI MY FRIENDS AND ...
... present . We did not yet know enough of matter in its essential constitution nor of the various forces of nature ; and all he could say was that everything pointed to its having been a development out 23 CHAPTER XXVI MY FRIENDS AND ...
Page 24
... present condition . So we had to wait and work contentedly at minor problems . And now , after forty years , though Spencer and Darwin and Weismann have thrown floods of light on the phenomena of life , its essential nature and its ...
... present condition . So we had to wait and work contentedly at minor problems . And now , after forty years , though Spencer and Darwin and Weismann have thrown floods of light on the phenomena of life , its essential nature and its ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
able afterwards Alfred Russel Wallace American animals appeared asked beautiful believe birds called cause chapter colour Colours of Animals cure curious Darwin Discobolus equally evidence experiments F. W. H. Myers facts feet flowers friends G. H. Lewes garden gave give Godalming Government Grant Allen Hampden hand Hensleigh Wedgwood Herbert Spencer hundred Huxley important interest kind labour Land Nationalization large number lecture letter lived looking Malay Archipelago medium miles Mivart morning mountains natural selection never obtained Origin of Species paper Parkstone persons phenomena plants pleasant principle produced Professor published question remarkable rendered reply result rocks round scientific séance seems seen social socialists society species Spencer spiritualism spiritualists theory thought tion told took trees vaccination valley walk Wallace whole wood write wrote