The New-York Review, and Atheneum Magazine, Band 2William Cullen Bryant, Henry J. Anderson, Robert Charles Sands E. Bliss & E. White, 1825 |
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Seite 8
... practice of cun- ningly stealing from one another , during the time of nest - building , the materials of which they are constructed . They differ from the king - pen- guin in these particulars , and also in having nests , which are ...
... practice of cun- ningly stealing from one another , during the time of nest - building , the materials of which they are constructed . They differ from the king - pen- guin in these particulars , and also in having nests , which are ...
Seite 16
... practice , that he experiences no embarrassment from his de- ficiency in the knowledge of chemistry , and is thus , from his experience , more fully convinced that its utility to the prac- titioner of the healing art is exceedingly ...
... practice , that he experiences no embarrassment from his de- ficiency in the knowledge of chemistry , and is thus , from his experience , more fully convinced that its utility to the prac- titioner of the healing art is exceedingly ...
Seite 18
... practice in this country , gene- rally , we would have fewer physicians , it is true , but the de- ficiency would be more than compensated by the high character the profession would sustain from the superior talents and ac- quirements ...
... practice in this country , gene- rally , we would have fewer physicians , it is true , but the de- ficiency would be more than compensated by the high character the profession would sustain from the superior talents and ac- quirements ...
Seite 33
... practice , not those of affectation . There is a kind of helpless simplicity , somewhat between pathos and drollery , in the account of the way in which the Captain's self - impor- tance was taken down just before his death . We give ...
... practice , not those of affectation . There is a kind of helpless simplicity , somewhat between pathos and drollery , in the account of the way in which the Captain's self - impor- tance was taken down just before his death . We give ...
Seite 43
... practice , thousands may be readily , and without any exertion of intellect , taught to apply it ; the apprentice ac- quires all that is previously known , with far less labour than it costs the man of science to add a single valuable ...
... practice , thousands may be readily , and without any exertion of intellect , taught to apply it ; the apprentice ac- quires all that is previously known , with far less labour than it costs the man of science to add a single valuable ...
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