... He had made dissections of frogs, toads, and a number of other animals, and had curious observations on them ; which papers, together with his goods, in his lodgings at Whitehall, were plundered at the beginning of the rebellion... Fathers of Biology - Side 103af Charles McRae - 1890 - 108 siderFuld visning - Om denne bog
| Thomas Martin - 1835 - 388 sider
...were plundered at the Rebellion ; he being for the King, and with him at Oxon ; but he often said, that of all the losses he sustained, no grief was so crucifying to him as the loss of his papers, which for love or money he could never retrieve or obtain.' — Letters from the Bodleian Library,... | |
| Cuthbert William Johnson - 1837 - 516 sider
...Rebellion ; he being for the King, and with him at Oxon ; but he often said, that of all the losse he sustained, no grief was so crucifying to him as the loss of those papers, which, for love or money, he could never retrieve. " In London, he lived with his brother... | |
| 1846 - 502 sider
...at the begmning of the Rebellion ; he being for the king, and with him at Oxon. But he often said, that of all the losses he sustained, no grief was so crucifying to him as the loss of those papers, which for love or money he could never retrieve or obtain. When King Charles I. by reason... | |
| Half hours - 1847 - 614 sider
...beginning of the rebellion ; he being for the king, and then with him at Oxon ; but he often said, that of all the losses he sustained, no grief was so crucifying to him as the lo'ss of these papers, which for love or money' he could never retrieve or obtain. When King Charles I. by reason... | |
| William Maxwell - 1848 - 460 sider
...beginning of the rebellion ; he being for the king, and then with him at Oxon ; but he often said, that of all the losses he sustained, no grief was so crucifying to him as the loss of these papers, which for love or money he could never retrieve or obtain. When king Charles I., by reason... | |
| 1848 - 460 sider
...beginning of the rebellion ; he being for the king, and then with him at Oxon ; but he often said, that of all the losses he sustained, no grief was so crucifying to him as the loss of these papers, which for love or money he could never retrieve or obtain. When king Charles I., by reason... | |
| John Francis Waller - 1857 - 228 sider
...erncifying to him aa the loss of his papers (containing notes of his dissections of many of the lower animals), which, together with his goods in his lodgings at Whitehall, were plnndered at the heginning of the rehellion." Bnt these notes on comparative anatomy were not the only... | |
| John Eglington Bailey - 1874 - 896 sider
...plundered in his lodgings at Whitehall, " he being for the King, and with him at Oxon." "He often said that of all the losses he sustained, no grief was so crucifying to him as the loss of these papers, which for love or money he could never retrieve or obtain."3 Of Archbishop Ussher, it... | |
| Robert Willis - 1878 - 412 sider
...and physiologist of the seventeenth. Aubrey makes particular mention of Harvey's having " often said that of all the losses he sustained, no grief was...dissections of the frog, toad, and other animals, particularly insects,) which together with his goods in his lodgings at Whitehall, were wrecked and... | |
| John Aubrey - 1982 - 340 sider
...at the beginning of the Rebellion, he being for the king, and with him at Oxford; but he often said, that of all the losses he sustained, no grief was so crucifying to him as the loss of these papers, which for love or money he could never retrieve or obtain. When Charles I by reason of... | |
| |