free hosting   image hosting   hosting reseller   online album   e-shop   famous people 
Free Website Templates
Free Installer

Bredimaco Angularus Directory 04
Page 06

All good things found in Bredimaco Angularus are wonderful ideas.

Bredimaco Angularus

Bredimaco Angularus Home

Bredimaco Angularus Sitemap

Bredimaco Angularus Dir 01

Bredimaco Angularus Dir 02

Bredimaco Angularus Dir 03

Bredimaco Angularus Dir 04

Bredimaco Angularus Dir 05

Bredimaco Angularus Dir 06

Bredimaco Angularus Dir 07

Bredimaco Angularus Dir 08

Bredimaco Angularus Dir 09

Bredimaco Angularus Dir 10

Bredimaco Angularus Directory 04
Page 06

You will, of course, observe that if Mrs. Bentley had sent the snuff-box to the buttery of St. John's College instead of Trinity, it would not have been language, for there would have been no covenant between sayer and sayee as to what the symbol should represent, there would have been no previously established association of ideas in the mind of the butler of St. John's between beer and snuff-box; the connection was artificial, arbitrary, and by no means one of those in respect of which an impromptu bargain might be proposed by the very symbol itself, and assented to without previous formality by the person to whom it was presented. More briefly, the butler of St. John's would not have been able to understand and read it aright. It would have been a dead letter to him--a snuff-box and not a letter; whereas to the butler of Trinity it was a letter and not a snuff-box.

Frogs and other amphibians stand higher in the scale of life than fish; they have acquired legs in place of fins, and lungs instead of gills; they can hop about on shore with perfect freedom. Now, frogs still produce a great deal of spawn, as every one knows: but the eggs in each brood are numbered in their case by hundreds, or at most by a thousand or two, not by millions as with many fishes. The spawn hatches out as a rule in ponds, and we have all seen the little black tadpoles crowding the edges of the water in such innumerable masses that one would suppose the frogs to be developed from them must cover the length and breadth of England. Yet what becomes of them all? Hundreds are destroyed in the early tadpole stage--eaten up or starved, or crowded out for want of air and space and water: a few alone survive or develop four legs, and absorb their tails and hop on shore as tiny froglings. Even then the massacre of the innocents continues. Only a tithe of those which succeeded in quitting their native pond ever return to it full grown, to spawn in due time, and become the parents of further generations.


[ Sec 04 Page 01 ] [ Sec 04 Page 02 ] [ Sec 04 Page 03 ] [ Sec 04 Page 04 ] [ Sec 04 Page 05 ]
[ Sec 04 Page 06 ] [ Sec 04 Page 07 ] [ Sec 04 Page 08 ] [ Sec 04 Page 09 ] [ Sec 04 Page 10 ]


This page is Copyright © Bredimaco Angularus and all rights are reserved. Please don't copy without proper authorization. References to other Web sites are not endorsements. Bredimaco Angularus offers no promises or confirmations about the quality or content of other sites to which Bredimaco points links. Links are provided for reference only and do not constitute endorsements of any type.