| David Thomas - 674 pages
...and in the intense light of cerebral excitement, they started into prominence, just as the spectral image of the key started into sight on the application...with all the influences to which we are subjected. Cornhill Magazine. fitenmr ftotms. 1 & [Wz hold it to be the duty of an Editor either to give an early... | |
| 1857 - 400 pages
...and in the intense light of. cerebral excitement they started into prominence, just as the spectral image of the key started into sight on the application...to which we are subjected. — Cornkill Magazine. " KENTISH KENDAL." — " On a morning* his grace,f the Earls of Essex, J and Wiltshire, || and other... | |
| George Henry Lewes - 1862 - 236 pages
...cerebral excitement * DRAPEH: Human Physiology, p. 228. they started into prominence, just as the spectral image of the key started into sight on the application...with all the influences to which we are subjected. If a garden wall can lead our vagabond thoughts into such speculations as these, surely it may also... | |
| 1865 - 372 pages
...past years they have heard their masters utter, without, of course, comprehending them. These tones had long been forgotten ; the traces were so faint...with all the influences to which we are subjected. — Gornhill Magazine. CONSTITUTION OF MATTEK. Some speculative ideas by M. Graham, the master of the... | |
| J. D. White, John Hugh McQuillen, George Jacob Ziegler, James William White, Edward Cameron Kirk, Lovick Pierce Anthony - 1872
...their masters utter, without, of course, comprehending them. These tones had long been forgotten ; th6 traces were so faint that, under ordinary conditions,...all the influences to which we are subjected."— (Gornhill Magazine and Ibid.) "Influence of Mental Impressions as a Cause of Bodily Deformity. —... | |
| 1866 - 368 pages
...without, of course, comprehending them. These tones had lon;g been forgotten ; the traces were so famt that, under ordinary conditions, they were invisible...with all the influences to which we are subjected. — Gornhill Magazine. CONSTITUTION OF MATTER. Some speculative ideas by M. Graham, the master of the... | |
| 1865 - 372 pages
...past years they have heard their masters utter, without, of course, comprehending them. These tones had long been forgotten ; the traces were so faint...condition of gas, matter is deprived of numerous and varyingproperties with which it appears invested when in the form of a liquid or solid. The gas exhibits... | |
| Lucius Edwin Smith, Henry Griggs Weston - 1874 - 524 pages
...and, in the intense light of cerebral excitement, they started into prominence, just as the spectral image of the key started into sight on the application of heat. We are involved in the universal metamorphosis. Nothing leaves us wholly as it found us. Every man... | |
| Robert Kidd - 1883 - 518 pages
...never fade, but in the intense light of cerebral excitement start into prominence just as the spectral image of the key started into sight on the application of heat. It is thus with all the influence to which we are subjected. VI. — THE KING'S PICTURE. THE king from the council chamber... | |
| Robert Kidd - 1883 - 518 pages
...never fade, but in the intense light of cerebral excitement start into prominence just as the spectral image of the key started into sight on the application of heat. It is thus with all the influence to which we are subjected. VI.—THE KINO'S PICTURE. THE king from the council chamber Came,... | |
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