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Lord Tennyson and his Friends

... Sir John Herschel, Hallam Lord Tennyson, the Hon. Lionel Tennyson, Mrs. Cameron, G. F. Watts, R.A., William Spedding, Charles Darwin, W. H. Longfellow, Dr. Jowett, Dr. Butler, Mrs. Ritchie, Dean Bradley, James Russell Lowell, the Marquess of Dufferin ...

Published: Saturday 28 October 1893
Newspaper: Graphic
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 608 | Page: 20 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

EIMER ON EVOLUTION.*

... been many and marked. The early ?? Darwin, Lamarck, Geoffrey St.Hilaire, and others- atltribulted erything to it. Then Charles Darwin and Wallace, with their 1tty019uonarydoctrine. of natural selection, almost removed it for a while from the cutegory of ...

Magazines

... whatever young authors may think, a publisher cannot make a book, and concludes his Reminiscences with a story of Charles Darwin, who was con- vinced that his Monograph on Earthworms would be a failure, whereas it reached a fifth edition in three ...

Published: Saturday 09 March 1895
Newspaper: Graphic
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1266 | Page: 24 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

LITERATURE

... having studied his works, would like to learn alittle of the an ,will find the story of his life in Mr. C. F. Eolder's Charles Darwin (G. P. Putnam's Sons). The work is the more' interest- Ing that it does not deal with ordinary biographical details or ...

LITERARY NOTES

... master of Clifton College; Clerk Maxwell and Modern Physics, by Mr. R. T. Glazebrook, of Trinity College, Cambridge; Charles Darwin and the Origin of Species, by Professor Edward Poulton; and a monograph on Lyell by Professor Bonney. The History of ...

REVIEWS

... REVIEWS. GERMAN SCIENCE FOR THE PEOPLLE.* A FALSE fact, said Charles Darwin, is much more mischievous than a false theory. A 'false argument is sure to be taken to pieces in the course 'of ubsequent investigation, but a false fact often perplexes speculation ...

LITERATURE

... t's books bhut sather dwells en his daily eoeupations agod hasbit at- school and colleoge,.in the world, and at home. Charles Darwin was born at SShsewsbury in 1899, and stnuied at the Universities of ldinburgh andCasnbritlge. In 1831 he startedin Jtt'LS ...

NOVELS OF THE DAY

... In the one you weary of mental inanition ; in the other, you auff er from a corres- pondiug indigestion. A statue of Charles Darwin, by Mr. Hope Pinker, -which ha.9 brs'(n ?? to Oxaford Univ'nsity by i-Jr. Edwwrd 13. Poulton. Fellow of je.sus Cell ego ...

REVIEWS

... some of those oft-quoted thingrs in heaven and earth. The other essays in this volume do not call for much notice. a Charles Darwin and Agnosticism is an attempt to elucidate from Darwin's Life and Letters the source and growth of that none the ...

DO LITERARY MEN LIKE MUSIC?

... during his leisure hours. A violin which belonged to him is still, we believe, in the careful possession of his family. Charles Darwin had no ear for music, but, in his earlier days at least, he had a great love for it. He often spoke of a curious feeling ...

Published: Saturday 21 June 1890
Newspaper: Graphic
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 2138 | Page: 17 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

BOOKS AND MAGAZINES

... Geometry Inevitable, by Professor Hal- ltead; and the following memorial poem by the late Professor Romanes, presented to Charles Darwin, and embodied in a volume for private circulation among his friends s THE IMMORTALITY THAT IS 'NOW. 'Tis said that memuory ...

GOSSIP FROM BOOKLAND.*

... saellblaneo of satin ijie ir humanity who bought tip tihe Lutilated pirs . volumes at high prices Tho illustriota plr Charles Darwin, being a practioal wnmin, (ill- 11101 troublod by arty Hoiittlrinot liotit books, L Hes 61101, harl r Uavago habit of ...