he succeeded in showing that decay, putrefaction and fermentation are fundamental facts, connecting links between the world of the living and the world of the dead. The research of the following decades brought to light the intimate relation existing... Microbiology - Page 3571921 - 1043 pagesFull view - About this book
| England - 1820 - 756 pages
...appears to consist in the powerful idea it gives of an unseen but felt communion and sympathy going on between the world of the living and the world of the dead. It is the vice and the misery of modern literature that ideas of this dark kind are left out and banished.... | |
| Royal Institution of Great Britain - Science - 1869 - 646 pages
...before after ghostly game ; or, as in Mexico, the dog was to carry the man across the river which lies between the world of the living and the world of the dead ; while in Greenland, a dog's head was placed by the grave of a little child, that the soul of the... | |
| Paul Carus - Philosophy - 1900 - 740 pages
...world below, and thus a compromise was effected. Now Persephone, the Queen of Hades, divides her time between the world of the living and the world of the dead. In winter vegetation lies dead, buried in the ground, but in spring the godTRIPTOLBMOS, THE PROTECTOR... | |
| Ramananda Chatterjee - India - 1921 - 614 pages
...accomplish this modern miracle by means of a wonderful "spirit wireless"—an adaptation to .communication between the world of the living and the world of the dead of the wireless telegraphy now in use on this earth. The Father of Cat. The remote ancestor of all... | |
| Charles Edward Marshall - Microorganisms - 1911 - 760 pages
...sure, he regarded the decomposition of organic matter as a phenomenon purely chemical, nevertheless he succeeded in showing that decay, putrefaction and...existing between microorganisms and the decomposition of * Prepared by Jacob G. Lipman with exception of sub-chapter on " Soil Inoculation" which has been prepared... | |
| Herbert Weir Smyth - Classical philology - 1912 - 320 pages
...by fire, be forced to undergo a fate more awful than Hades itself — to hover eternally in unrest between the world of the living and the world of the dead. There are no ghosts in Homer — de non af¿arentlbus et non existentil¿us eadem en ratio. The total... | |
| Herbert Weir Smyth - Classical philology - 1912 - 324 pages
...by fire, be forced to undergo a fate more awful than Hades itself — to hover eternally in unrest between the world of the living and the world of the dead. There are no ghosts in Homer — de non apparentibus et non existentibus eadem est ratio. The total... | |
| Herbert Weir Smyth - Classical philology - 1912 - 318 pages
...by fire, be forced to undergo a fate more awful than Hades itself — to hover eternally in unrest between the world of the living and the world of the dead. There are no ghosts in Homer — de non apparentibus et non existentibus eadem est ratio. The total... | |
| Johannes Anker Larsen - Danish fiction - 1924 - 400 pages
...I hear. Have you reached the astral plane now, so that you can travel gratis backwards and forwards between the world of the living and the world of the dead? Do you think you can be there to receive me on the other side one of these days? "No, none of that!"... | |
| Bronislaw Malinowski - Ethnopsychology - 1926 - 104 pages
...beliefs about the spirit-world, with the practices during the milamala season, and with the relations between the world of the living and the world of the dead, such as exist in native forms of spiritism. 1 After death every spirit goes to the nether world in... | |
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