Eclectic Magazine, and Monthly Edition of the Living Age, Volume 40;Volume 103John Holmes Agnew, Walter Hilliard Bidwell Leavitt, Throw and Company, 1884 |
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Página 11
... color in nature , otherwise than green ; without them our world would be want- ing in more than half the beautiful ob- jects which give it its greatest æsthetic charm in the appreciative eyes of culti- vated humanity . Of course , if ...
... color in nature , otherwise than green ; without them our world would be want- ing in more than half the beautiful ob- jects which give it its greatest æsthetic charm in the appreciative eyes of culti- vated humanity . Of course , if ...
Página 12
... color - sense in the insects themselves . The lovely tints of the summer flowers , and the exquisite pat- terns on the butterfly's wings , have alike been developed through the taste and the selective action of these humble little ...
... color - sense in the insects themselves . The lovely tints of the summer flowers , and the exquisite pat- terns on the butterfly's wings , have alike been developed through the taste and the selective action of these humble little ...
Página 13
... color . Even if we look at the catkins and grass - blossoms of our own day , we see that they differ slightly in hue from the foliage of their respective plants . But it seems not im- probable that color may have appeared much more ...
... color . Even if we look at the catkins and grass - blossoms of our own day , we see that they differ slightly in hue from the foliage of their respective plants . But it seems not im- probable that color may have appeared much more ...
Página 14
... colors ; and the bees upon which he experimented soon learned to return to one particular color only , even though both the paper and the honey were oc- casionally transposed . Thus we have direct evidence of the clearest sort that the ...
... colors ; and the bees upon which he experimented soon learned to return to one particular color only , even though both the paper and the honey were oc- casionally transposed . Thus we have direct evidence of the clearest sort that the ...
Página 15
... colors , and will , in particular , fly down to objects of the same hue as their own mates . Of course , bees and butterflies , always liv- ing among flowers , especially require a good sense of color ; and so they quite accord with our ...
... colors , and will , in particular , fly down to objects of the same hue as their own mates . Of course , bees and butterflies , always liv- ing among flowers , especially require a good sense of color ; and so they quite accord with our ...
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Palavras e frases frequentes
admiration appears beauty become believe body brain Buddhism called century character Charles Reade Christian Church color Covent Garden death dream Earl earth emotion England English existence eyes fact faith feeling Fersen force French genius George Sand German give Goethe gutta-percha hand heart Heinrich Heine honor human idea insects interest Italy Jews Judaism kind King Lady less ligion literary living look Lord marriage Matthew Arnold means ment mind modern Molière moral nature ness never night once Pall Mall Gazette passed person play poem poet poetic poetry political Polybios present Prince Prince Bismarck Princess religion Roman Rome Russia seems sense soul speak spirit style theatre Thersander things thought tion true truth whole words Wordsworth writes young