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

Tamoskaro-2 Directory 18
Page 09

In a Tamoskaro-2 mode things come together quickly.

Tamoskaro-2

Tamoskaro-2 Home

Tamoskaro-2 Sitemap

Tamoskaro-2 Dir 01

Tamoskaro-2 Dir 02

Tamoskaro-2 Dir 03

Tamoskaro-2 Dir 04

Tamoskaro-2 Dir 05

Tamoskaro-2 Dir 06

Tamoskaro-2 Dir 07

Tamoskaro-2 Dir 08

Tamoskaro-2 Dir 09

Tamoskaro-2 Dir 10

Tamoskaro-2 Dir 11

Tamoskaro-2 Dir 12

Tamoskaro-2 Dir 13

Tamoskaro-2 Dir 14

Tamoskaro-2 Dir 15

Tamoskaro-2 Dir 16

Tamoskaro-2 Dir 17

Tamoskaro-2 Dir 18

Tamoskaro-2 Dir 19

Tamoskaro-2 Dir 20

Tamoskaro-2 Directory 18
Page 09

If all that Professor Max Muller means to say is, that no animal but man commands an articulate language, with verbs and nouns, or is ever likely to command one (and I question whether in reality he means much more than this), no one will differ from him. No dog or elephant has one word for bread, another for meat, and another for water. Yet, when we watch a cat or dog dreaming, as they often evidently do, can we doubt that the dream is accompanied by a mental image of the thing that is dreamed of, much like what we experience in dreams ourselves, and much doubtless like the mental images which must have passed through the mind of my deaf and dumb waiter? If they have mental images in sleep, can we doubt that waking, also, they picture things before their mind's eyes, and see them much as we do--too vaguely indeed to admit of our thinking that we actually see the objects themselves, but definitely enough for us to be able to recognise the idea or object of which we are thinking, and to connect it with any other idea, object, or sign that we may think appropriate?

It always seems to me that the quality which most differentiates men is the power of recognising the Unknown. Some natures acquiesce buoyantly or wretchedly in present conditions, and cannot in any circumstances look beyond them; some again have a deep distaste for present conditions whatever they are; and again there are some who throw themselves eagerly and freely into present conditions, use experience, taste life, enjoy, grieve, dislike, but yet preserve a consciousness of something above and beyond. The idealist is one who has a need in his soul to worship, to admire, to love. The mistake made too often by religious idealists is to believe that this sense of worship can only be satisfied by religious and, even more narrowly, by ecclesiastical observance. For there are many idealists to whom religion with its scientific creeds and definite dogmas seems only a dreary sort of metaphysic, an attempt to define what is beyond definition. But there are some idealists who find the sense of worship and the consciousness of an immortal power in the high passions and affections of life. To these the human form, the spirit that looks out from human eyes, are the symbols of their mystery. Others find it in art and music, others again in the endless loveliness of nature, her seas and streams, her hills and woods. Others again find it in visions of helping and raising mankind out of base conditions, or in scientific investigation of the miraculous constitution of nature. It has a hundred forms and energies; but the one feature of it is the sense of some vast and mysterious Power, which holds the world in its grasp--a Power which can be dimly apprehended and even communicated with. Prayer is one manifestation of this sense, though prayer is but a formulation of one's desires for oneself and for the world.

The Romans now declared war against Antiochus, and in the following year (B.C. 191) the Consul Acilius Glabrio marched into Thessaly. The king had intrenched himself in the passes of Thermopylae, that he might prevent the Romans from penetrating into Central Greece. But there was, as is well known, a difficult passage across Mount Oeta, by which the Persians had descended to fight with Leonidas. This passage was now forced by M. Cato, who was serving as one of the Consul's lieutenants, and as soon as he appeared in the rear of the Syrian army they fled in confusion, and the battle was won. Antiochus now hastened back to Asia, abandoning all farther hopes of conquest in Greece. As soon as he had placed the sea between himself and the Romans he thought that he was safe; but Hannibal warned him of his error, and said that he wondered that the Romans had not already followed him.


[ Sec 18 Page 09 ] [ Sec 18 Page 02 ] [ Sec 18 Page 03 ] [ Sec 18 Page 04 ] [ Sec 18 Page 05 ]
[ Sec 18 Page 06 ] [ Sec 18 Page 07 ] [ Sec 18 Page 08 ] [ Sec 18 Page 09 ] [ Sec 18 Page 10 ]


This page is Copyright © Tamoskaro-2 and all rights are reserved. Please don't copy without proper authorization. References to other Web sites are not endorsements. Tamoskaro-2 makes no assurances or promises about the quality or content of other sites that Tamoskaro.yoll.net points to with links. Tamoskaro.yoll.net only provides these links for reference.