Eclectic Magazine, and Monthly Edition of the Living Age, Volume 37;Volume 100John Holmes Agnew, Walter Hilliard Bidwell Leavitt, Throw and Company, 1883 |
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Página 24
... stars ( all which he took to be suns enlightening other planets , as our sun does ours ) as big as Mercury or Venus seems to us , and gradually diminishing for sixteen months and then sinking into nothing . ' " All But although what we ...
... stars ( all which he took to be suns enlightening other planets , as our sun does ours ) as big as Mercury or Venus seems to us , and gradually diminishing for sixteen months and then sinking into nothing . ' " All But although what we ...
Página 27
... stars can only be explained by the downfall of meteoric and cometic matter upon some sun like our own , which up to that time had been steadily pouring forth heat and light to nourish the worlds circling around it . This opinion ...
... stars can only be explained by the downfall of meteoric and cometic matter upon some sun like our own , which up to that time had been steadily pouring forth heat and light to nourish the worlds circling around it . This opinion ...
Página 29
... stars might indicate stellar move- ments of recession or of approach . But of that he should have seen , had he reasoned the matter aright , there was no hope or even possibility . For the light of a star contains rays of all colors ...
... stars might indicate stellar move- ments of recession or of approach . But of that he should have seen , had he reasoned the matter aright , there was no hope or even possibility . For the light of a star contains rays of all colors ...
Página 112
... stars for the name . He'll never know it , though everybody else will . ' Rogers had the most bitter hatred against certain people , and we suppose the unhappy Mr. R- was one of them . We believe this was the gentle- man who asked ...
... stars for the name . He'll never know it , though everybody else will . ' Rogers had the most bitter hatred against certain people , and we suppose the unhappy Mr. R- was one of them . We believe this was the gentle- man who asked ...
Página 160
... stars , nebulæ , and whatever else may exist in the universe , which may have a ponderable character . Thus the whole material universe , whatever its extent , may be regarded as equivalent in weight to a certain number of tons or ...
... stars , nebulæ , and whatever else may exist in the universe , which may have a ponderable character . Thus the whole material universe , whatever its extent , may be regarded as equivalent in weight to a certain number of tons or ...
Outras edições - Ver tudo
Eclectic Magazine: Foreign Literature, Volume 40 John Holmes Agnew,Walter Hilliard Bidwell Visualização integral - 1857 |
Eclectic Magazine: Foreign Literature, Volume 18;Volume 81 John Holmes Agnew,Walter Hilliard Bidwell,Henry T. Steele Visualização integral - 1873 |
Palavras e frases frequentes
admiration Amélie appear Arcturus Aristotle asked beautiful believe better called character comet Cymbeline dark death divining rod doubt Edgeworth effect England English ensilage Esther Johnson existence eyes face fact feel Flushington French Gambetta give Goethe Guiderius hand heard heart human humor Iachimo idea Imogen James John Brown Kemble kind la Harpe lady less light lines living look Lord Madame marriage matter means ment mind Miss Monsieur Morocco nature Nellie never night once Ottoman poetry party passed pict Pisanio poems poet poetry political poor Portuguese Posthumus present prison round Scheveningen seems seen sense Siberia side soul speak spectrum stars story supposed Swift Tangier tell thee things thou thought tion told truth turned voice whole words writing young