My Life: A Record of Events and Opinions, 2. köideDodd, Mead, 1906 |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 72
Page 1
... various works . On these occasions I usually lunched with him and his brother , and sometimes one other visitor , and had a little talk on some of the matters specially interesting him . He also sometimes called on me in St. Mark's ...
... various works . On these occasions I usually lunched with him and his brother , and sometimes one other visitor , and had a little talk on some of the matters specially interesting him . He also sometimes called on me in St. Mark's ...
Page 20
... various difficulties may perhaps be found in the circumstance that he had held his views for so many years almost unchallenged . In a letter to Sir Charles Lyell , in 1866 , he says , " I feel a strong conviction that soon everyone will ...
... various difficulties may perhaps be found in the circumstance that he had held his views for so many years almost unchallenged . In a letter to Sir Charles Lyell , in 1866 , he says , " I feel a strong conviction that soon everyone will ...
Page 23
... various forces of nature ; and all he could say was that everything pointed to its having been a development out of matter - a phase of that continuous process of evolution by which the whole universe had been 23 CHAPTER XXVI MY FRIENDS ...
... various forces of nature ; and all he could say was that everything pointed to its having been a development out of matter - a phase of that continuous process of evolution by which the whole universe had been 23 CHAPTER XXVI MY FRIENDS ...
Page 42
... various branches of natural science . I often called on him in the evening , when I usually found him at work with his microscope , and he always took pleasure in showing me some special structure or some obscure organism , and ...
... various branches of natural science . I often called on him in the evening , when I usually found him at work with his microscope , and he always took pleasure in showing me some special structure or some obscure organism , and ...
Page 47
... various degrees of rapidity , but so related that their simultaneous action on the organ of taste produces an agreeable harmony . The saccharine , acid , and ethylic trills are rhythmical , and a glass of punch is truly the analogue of ...
... various degrees of rapidity , but so related that their simultaneous action on the organ of taste produces an agreeable harmony . The saccharine , acid , and ethylic trills are rhythmical , and a glass of punch is truly the analogue of ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
A. R. Wallace able acquaintance afterwards Alfred Russel Wallace American animals asked beautiful believe birds called cause chapter colour Colours of Animals cure curious Darwin declared Discobolus equally evidence experiments F. W. H. Myers facts feet flowers friends G. H. Lewes garden gave give Godalming Government Grant Allen Hampden hand Herbert Spencer hundred interest islands kind labour lady Land Nationalization large number lecture letter lived looking Malay Archipelago medium miles morning mountains natural selection never obtained Origin of Species paper persons phenomena plants pleasant present pretty produced Professor published question remarkable rendered reply result rock round scientific séance seems seen social socialists society species spiritualism spiritualists theory thought thousand tion told took trees vaccination valley walk Wallace whole wood write wrote