The Nineteenth Century, Volume 11Henry S. King & Company, 1882 |
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Page 30
... better judge of the matter than a mere layman can be . But I do hold very strongly that it is infinitely better for medical science to lose this advantage , and to advance more slowly without it on its intellectual side , than to soil ...
... better judge of the matter than a mere layman can be . But I do hold very strongly that it is infinitely better for medical science to lose this advantage , and to advance more slowly without it on its intellectual side , than to soil ...
Page 229
... better for his own people , better for him- self , better for future generations , that he should starve than steal ? If you have no foundation of knowledge and habit of thought to work upon , what chance have you of persuading the ...
... better for his own people , better for him- self , better for future generations , that he should starve than steal ? If you have no foundation of knowledge and habit of thought to work upon , what chance have you of persuading the ...
Page 754
... better things , depend upon it he will either be picked up from outside or he will receive preferment from his own manager , who on the first opportunity would give him a chance ' with a part in the lever du rideau , or , if he humbly ...
... better things , depend upon it he will either be picked up from outside or he will receive preferment from his own manager , who on the first opportunity would give him a chance ' with a part in the lever du rideau , or , if he humbly ...
Contents
AN ENGLISHMANS PROTEST By Cardinal Manning | 39 |
THE BIOLOGISTS ON VIVISECTION | 102 |
MYTHOLOGY AMONG THE HOTTENTOTS By Professor Max Müller | 148 |
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