| Walter Savage Landor - 1927 - 354 pages
...self-balanced, on her centre hung. Unhappily he permitted his learning to render him verbose immediately after : Let there be light, said God, and forthwith light...of things, quintessence pure, Sprung from the deep. The intermediate verse is useless and injurious ; beside, according to his own account, light was not... | |
| Edmund Shaftesbury - 1924 - 344 pages
...accomplishment, let it be that which will accomplish the most; its name is personal magnetism." " 'Let there he light!' said God; and forthwith Light Ethereal, first...pure, Sprung from the deep; and, from her native east, The journey through the airy gloom began, Spher'd in a radiant cloud." 30 Normal consciousness is normal... | |
| Edmund Shaftesbury - 1924 - 336 pages
...it operates; but it certainly is a force; and being a force, it must have some means of passage. " 'Let there be Light!' said God; and forthwith Light...things, quintessence pure, Sprung from the deep." One theory makes light a series of waves on the bosom of the universal ether; another makes it a substance... | |
| John Milton - 1930 - 1150 pages
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| 1933 - 698 pages
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| 1932 - 720 pages
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| John Milton - 1936 - 686 pages
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| John Milton - 1938 - 694 pages
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