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... kind are not uncommon amongst clever children , or amongst grown - up people of vivid imagination and untrained mind . Most remark- able examples are given by Bunyan , in that astonishing auto- biography which we think the greatest ...
... kind of intoxication . We know little so Theocritean in its tender enthusiasm - little also so genuinely characteristic of Blake — as the letter in which he announced his arrival at Felpham to Flaxman : - ' Dear Sculptor of Eternity ...
... kind , is to be referred , ' as the learned German historian of Botany has remarked , to the mingling together of two distinct sources , the observation of facts , and speculation upon the facts observed , ' or to use the language of ...
... kind ; he probably knew animals better , and under more general views , than we do now . Although moderns have added their discoveries to those of the ancients , I do not believe that we have many works on Natural History that we can ...
... kind of sensation . As relates to the senses , man is principally distinguished from other animals by his greater delicacy of touch , the other senses being often possessed by animals in greater perfection than by him . Touch and taste ...