Hobbes's leviathan, or like bees in perpendicular swarm upon a tree, or like a carrion corrupted into vermin, still preserving the shape and figure of the mother animal : that all invention is formed by the morsure of two or more of these animals... Studien zur englischen Philologie - Page 67by Hans Thüme - 1927 - 102 pagesFull view - About this book
| Jonathan Swift - 1801 - 488 pages
...a carrion corrupted into vermin, still preserving the shape and figure of the mother animal : that all invention is formed by the morsure of two or more of these animals, upon certain capillary nerves, which proceed from thence, whereof three branches spread into the tongue, and two into the right hand.... | |
| Jonathan Swift - 1801 - 498 pages
...a carrion corrupted into vermin, still preserving the shape and figure of the mother animal : that all invention is formed by the morsure of two or more of these animals, upon certain capillary nerves, which proceed from thence, whereof three branches spread into the tongue, and two into the right hand.... | |
| Jonathan Swift - 1803 - 346 pages
...station of life, or give them vigour and humour, to imprint the marks of their little. teeth. That, if the morsure be hexagonal, it produces poetry ; the circular, gives eloquence : if the bite hath beer> conical, the person, whose nerve is so affected, shall be disposed to write... | |
| Jonathan Swift, William Wotton - 1811 - 390 pages
...like a carrion corrupted into vermin, still preserving the shape and figure of the mother animal. That all invention is formed by the morsure of two or more of these animals, upon certain capillary nerves, which proceed from thence, whereof three branches spread into the tongue, and two into the right hand.... | |
| Jonathan Swift, Walter Scott - 1814 - 442 pages
...a carrion corrupted into vermin, still preserving the shape and figure of the mother animal : that all invention is formed by the morsure of two or more of these animals, upon certain capillary nerves, which proceed from thence, whereof three branches spread into the tongue, and two into the right hand.... | |
| Jonathan Swift - 1814 - 448 pages
...a carrion corrupted into vermin, still preserving the shape and figure of the mother animal : that all invention is formed by the morsure of two or more of these animals, upon certain capillary nerves, which proceed from thence, whereof three branches spread into the tongue, and two into the right hand.... | |
| Jonathan Swift - 1814 - 446 pages
...vermin, still preserving the shape and figure of the mother animal : that all invention is forined by the morsure of two or more of these animals, upon certain capillary nerves, which proceed from thence, whereof threfe branches spread into the tongue, and two into the right hand.... | |
| Jonathan Swift, Walter Scott - 1814 - 446 pages
...hamated station of life, or give them vigour and humour to imprint the marks of their little teeth. That, if the morsure be hexagonal, it produces poetry ; the circular, gives eloquence: if the bite hath been conical, the person, whose nerve is so affected, shall be disposed to write upon... | |
| Jonathan Swift - 1823 - 342 pages
...like a carrion corrupted into vermin, still preserving the shape and figure of the mother animal. That all invention is formed by the morsure of two or more of these animals, upon certain capillary nervers, which proceed from thence ; whereof three branches spread into the tongue, and two into the... | |
| Jonathan Swift - 1824 - 458 pages
...a carrion corrupted into vermin, still preserving the shape and figure of the mother animal : that all invention is formed by the morsure of two or more of these animals, upon certain capillary nerves, which proceed from thence, whereof three branches spread into the tongue, and two into the right hand.... | |
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