Transactions of the Albany Institute, 8. köideWebster and Skinners, 1876 |
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Page 6
... Branches go off from it to villages on the Bosphorus ; and as it approaches Pera on the hill , its water branches off to four or five villages of which it is the centre , from a receiving reservoir 200 feet square . No one of the ...
... Branches go off from it to villages on the Bosphorus ; and as it approaches Pera on the hill , its water branches off to four or five villages of which it is the centre , from a receiving reservoir 200 feet square . No one of the ...
Page 9
... branch of the earliest Constantinople water system . They were designed as cisterns of reserve , either to enable the city to stand a protracted siege , or to respond to the necessities of the population , when in consequence of drought ...
... branch of the earliest Constantinople water system . They were designed as cisterns of reserve , either to enable the city to stand a protracted siege , or to respond to the necessities of the population , when in consequence of drought ...
Page 23
... branch in the legislature of Maryland . He was elected as a federalist , and served with credit in the session commencing in November , 1799. He was a candidate for re - election the next year , and failed on account of the de- cisive ...
... branch in the legislature of Maryland . He was elected as a federalist , and served with credit in the session commencing in November , 1799. He was a candidate for re - election the next year , and failed on account of the de- cisive ...
Page 29
... branch of the government must work harm in the action of the others , and so destroy the equilibrium of the whole . To appreciate the obligations of his office , a judge of this court must be a statesman , he must comprehend the ...
... branch of the government must work harm in the action of the others , and so destroy the equilibrium of the whole . To appreciate the obligations of his office , a judge of this court must be a statesman , he must comprehend the ...
Page 35
... branch of the government , have much greater freedom ; reason , guided by precedent , plays a more import- ant role ; the constitution is not amended by a positive act , it is developed , like the common law , by the inspiring reason ...
... branch of the government , have much greater freedom ; reason , guided by precedent , plays a more import- ant role ; the constitution is not amended by a positive act , it is developed , like the common law , by the inspiring reason ...
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Common terms and phrases
Albany Institute alchemy animal aqueduct atoms attacked attain beauty become beloved black spruce body Bosphorus branch called canoe carried causation cause character cisterns condition coracle created dead death desire divine mysteries earth effect enjoyment enteric fever Eocene eternal existence fact faith feet fire flowering plants force forest frame fungi fungus future world Ghazzali Hasenclever heart heat Hipparion holy word insects intelligence kind knowledge known Koran lamellæ land larvæ learned ledge light look Lord material matter means ment miles mind Mohammedan motion mystics nature obtain pain passengers perfection person Peter Hasenclever phenomena philosophers plants portable boat prophets qualities rail road reached reason resembles result river Schenectady seeker senses slave soul species spirit spores spruce stone supply Taney things thou tion torment Trans trees truth understand VERPLANCK COLVIN viii vision
Popular passages
Page 34 - Upon the whole, therefore, it is the judgment of this court, that it appears by the record before us that the plaintiff in error is not a citizen of Missouri, in the sense in which that word is used in the Constitution ; and that the Circuit Court of the United States, for that reason, had no jurisdiction in the case, and could give no judgment in it. Its judgment for the defendant must, consequently, be reversed, and a mandate issued, directing the suit to be dismissed for want of jurisdiction.
Page 228 - In affirming that the growth of the body is mechanical, and that thought, as exercised by us, has its correlative in the physics of the brain, I think the position of the " Materialist " is stated as far as that position is a tenable one. I think the materialist will be able finally to maintain this position against all attacks ; but I do not think, as the human mind is at present constituted, that he can pass beyond it.
Page 24 - He did rebuke those masters, who, in the exercise of power, are deaf to the calls of humanity; and he warned them of the evils they might bring upon themselves. He did speak with abhorrence of those reptiles, who live by trading in human flesh, and enrich themselves by tearing the husband from the wife, the infant from the bosom of the mother; and this, I am instructed, was the head and front of his offending.
Page 256 - The whole is covered with the rough hide of an ox or a horse ; the seat is in the middle; it carries but one person, or, if a second goes into it to be wafted over a river, he stands behind the rower, leaning on his shoulders.
Page 25 - A hard necessity, indeed, compels us to endure the evil of slavery for a time. It was imposed upon us by another nation, while we were yet in a state of colonial vassalage. It cannot be easily, or suddenly removed. Yet while it continues it is a blot on our national character, and every real lover of freedom confidently hopes that it will be effectually, though it must be gradually, wiped away; and earnestly looks for the means, by which this necessary object may be best attained.
Page 256 - But that which surprises me most in the land, after the city itself, I will now proceed to mention. The boats which come down the river to Babylon are circular, and made of skins. The frames, which are of willow, are cut in the country of the Armenians above Assyria, and on these, which serve for hulls, a covering of skins is stretched outside, and thus the boats are made, without either stem or stern, quite round like a shield.
Page 226 - ... like Hume. Mr. Spencer takes another line. With him, as with the uneducated man, there is no doubt or question as to the existence of an external world. But he differs from the uneducated, who think that the world really is what consciousness represents it to be. Our states of consciousness are mere symbols of an outside entity which produces them and determines the order of their succession, but the real nature of which we can never know.
Page 227 - You who have escaped from these religions into the high and dry light of the understanding may deride them ; but in so doing you deride accidents of form merely, and fail to touch the immovable basis of the religious sentiment in the emotional nature of man. To yield this sentiment reasonable satisfaction is the problem of problems at the present hour.
Page 227 - In fact the whole process of evolution is the manifestation of a Power absolutely inscrutable to the intellect of man. As little in our day as in the days of Job can man by searching find this Power out. Considered fundamentally, then, it is by the operation of an insoluble mystery that life on earth is evolved, species differentiated, and mind unfolded from their prepotent elements in the immeasurable past.
Page 227 - Can it be possible that man's knowledge is the greatest knowledge— that man's life is the highest life ? My friends, the profession of that Atheism with which I am sometimes so lightly charged would, in my case, be an impossible answer to this question...