The Quarterly Review, Volume 50William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, John Murray, Rowland Edmund Prothero (Baron Ernle), George Walter Prothero John Murray, 1834 |
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Page 3
... sense of that term ; hence more than the half of one volume is a repetition of the topics which are found in the ... senses generally , including the eye and the ear , and of the sensibility to impressions of infants , insects , and ...
... sense of that term ; hence more than the half of one volume is a repetition of the topics which are found in the ... senses generally , including the eye and the ear , and of the sensibility to impressions of infants , insects , and ...
Page 5
... his feverish dream by night , he feels an exaggerated sense of his own importance , that precludes him from bestowing a single reflection — upon upon the commencement , the termination , and the final The Universe and its Author .
... his feverish dream by night , he feels an exaggerated sense of his own importance , that precludes him from bestowing a single reflection — upon upon the commencement , the termination , and the final The Universe and its Author .
Page 26
... sense of the ever - present Deity , when we consider that at this moment there are upwards of a thousand millions of human beings walking on this globe , dependent for their daily maintenance upon the vapours of the ocean , which have ...
... sense of the ever - present Deity , when we consider that at this moment there are upwards of a thousand millions of human beings walking on this globe , dependent for their daily maintenance upon the vapours of the ocean , which have ...
Page 27
... dazzling the sense in either case . The atmosphere , by its refracting power , economises the separate sunbeams , melting , as it were , the lines of of fire into a fluid , and filling the space The Universe and its Author . 27.
... dazzling the sense in either case . The atmosphere , by its refracting power , economises the separate sunbeams , melting , as it were , the lines of of fire into a fluid , and filling the space The Universe and its Author . 27.
Page 33
... mode in which matter is spiritualized into idea . All that we can say is , ' observes Sir Charles Bell , VOL . L. NO . XCIX . D ' that the agi- tations tations of the nerves of the outward senses are the The Universe and its Author . 33.
... mode in which matter is spiritualized into idea . All that we can say is , ' observes Sir Charles Bell , VOL . L. NO . XCIX . D ' that the agi- tations tations of the nerves of the outward senses are the The Universe and its Author . 33.
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