'While the 'boy' waits'.Hardwicke, 1879 - 340 pages |
From inside the book
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Page 1
... the food on which this particular class subsisted has failed . They have never been so numerous in con- nection with the daily press as with the weekly ; B and as periodicals published every twenty - four hours are NEWSPAPER-READERS.
... the food on which this particular class subsisted has failed . They have never been so numerous in con- nection with the daily press as with the weekly ; B and as periodicals published every twenty - four hours are NEWSPAPER-READERS.
Page 4
... particular vendor on his way home , and peruses it in the bosom of his family , reading the choice passages aloud . The well - to - do citizen is regularly supplied at his break- fast table , and the sheet , being carefully dried , is ...
... particular vendor on his way home , and peruses it in the bosom of his family , reading the choice passages aloud . The well - to - do citizen is regularly supplied at his break- fast table , and the sheet , being carefully dried , is ...
Page 8
... particular description of reader , the people whose educational acquirements and staple of information are derived from newspapers . They make up the great bulk of the public , and hence by an inverse process " public opinion " comes to ...
... particular description of reader , the people whose educational acquirements and staple of information are derived from newspapers . They make up the great bulk of the public , and hence by an inverse process " public opinion " comes to ...
Page 10
... particular Juggernaut than tolerate an iconoclast . If , however , the case were different , and the British public were as inquisitive as they are now devoid of curiosity , it is highly improbable they could pick up any considerable ...
... particular Juggernaut than tolerate an iconoclast . If , however , the case were different , and the British public were as inquisitive as they are now devoid of curiosity , it is highly improbable they could pick up any considerable ...
Page 13
... particular line may be , literary , musical , or dramatic , the operator not only regards his province as sacred to his own ideas , but he en- tertains a deep inner conviction that he is the only , or , at least , the more prominent ...
... particular line may be , literary , musical , or dramatic , the operator not only regards his province as sacred to his own ideas , but he en- tertains a deep inner conviction that he is the only , or , at least , the more prominent ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
better Birds BRITISH BRITISH BIRDS cease character cloth gilt Coloured Figures Coloured Plates conscience convinced Crown 8vo Demy 8vo Dummy duty energy enterprise Ergon everything evil existence experience fact faculty Fcap Figures of Eighty FLOWERING PLANTS FLOWERS force girl happy HARDWICKE & BOGUE heart HENRY POWER idea individual influence instinct intelligence interest J. E. TAYLOR judgment labour Larvæ less look Marsupialia matter ment mind moral nation NATURAL HISTORY ness never object opinion oppressively respectable organism particular PETER SCHLEMIHL plain Plants pockets popular practice principle purpose R. A. PROCTOR racter readers reason recognise reduced price result Science Second Edition selfish shillings Sir WILLIAM JARDINE social society Species spirit success super-royal 8vo thing thought tion truth Uriah Heep Vols WALFORD wise woman women Woodcuts worth wrong young
Popular passages
Page 327 - HAMLET. Do you see yonder cloud that's almost in shape of a camel ? POLONIUS. By the mass, and 'tis like a camel, indeed. HAMLET. Methinks it is like a weasel. POLONIUS. It is backed like a weasel. HAMLET. Or like a whale? POLONIUS. Very like a whale.
Page 24 - BONAPARTE. NEW AND ENLARGED EDITION, completed by the insertion of above One Hundred Birds omitted in the original Work, and Illustrated by valuable Notes, and Life of the Author, by Sir WILLIAM JARDINE. Three...
Page 6 - RUST, SMUT, MILDEW, AND MOULD. An Introduction to the Study of Microscopic Fungi. Illustrated with 269 Coloured Figures by JE SOWERBY. Fourth Edition, with Appendix of New Species. Crown 8vo, cloth, 6s.
Page 24 - WYNTER, ANDREW, MD, MRCP SUBTLE BRAINS AND LISSOM FINGERS : Being some of the Chisel Marks of our Industrial and Scientific Progress. Third Edition, revised and corrected by ANDREW STEINMETZ. Fcap. 8vo, cloth, 3*. 6d. CURIOSITIES OF CIVILIZATION. Being Essays reprinted from the Quarterly and Edinburgh Reviews.
Page 17 - Edited by WS DALLAS, FLS, Assistant Secretary of the Geological Society. In addition to Articles which are of abiding interest, the POPULAR SCIENCE REVIEW contains a Complete Record of Progress in every Department of Science, including ASTRONOMY. BOTANY. CHEMISTRY. ETHNOLOGY.
Page 13 - WILD FLOWERS WORTH NOTICE : A Selection of some of our Native Plants which are most attractive for their Beauty, Uses, or Associations. With 108 Coloured Figures by JE SOWERBY.
Page 20 - Drawing of every British Plant. Edited and brought up to the Present Standard of Scientific Knowledge by T. BOSWELL (formerly SYME), LL.DFLS, &c. With Popular Descriptions of the Uses, History, and Traditions of each Plant, by Mrs. LANKESTEB, Author of " Wild Flowers Worth Notice," " The British Ferns,
Page 27 - THE MIDLAND NATURALIST. The Journal of the Associated Natural History, Philosophical, and Archaeological Societies and Field Clubs of the Midland Counties.
Page 16 - NOTES ON COLLECTING AND PRESERVING NATURAL HISTORY OBJECTS. Edited by JE TAYLOR, FLS, FGS, Editor of
Page 17 - Editor of American Journal of Microscopy. HOW TO USE THE MICROSCOPE. Practical Hints on the Selection and Use of the Microscope, intended for Beginners. Second Edition. Crown 8vo, cloth, 3^.