- generation; in the Fern and seed, evolution, 
430 TRANS. OF THE ACAD. OF SCIENCE. 
oe sentiments. We use taste, also, in such parallel significa- 
tio aste comprises certain tactile sensations, such as 
pense a pungency, ete., and the Ae st of aromatic or olfacto- 
ry sensations (Proc. Am. Ass’ n, 1854, p. 248), besides the spe- 
¢ or exclusively gustative ones of sour, salt, sweet, bitter, 
ei In this tricompound occurrence it —— izes, by - 
mon appreciation of humanity, the sphere of agreement or 
assimilation, the rate of appreciation, as it were. Th 
tril, as representative of the respiratory and olfacto 
tion, in natural language implies the active pathos or fervor, 
Trieb (Germ.) or passion (French), the faculty of active 
desire, to which, indeed, the whole glandular system, — 
a focal point of on ements as an were. These three latter 
a 
“ Da, we die Menschen streben : : 2s 
Perag it is tho that payallgsel botany. may i i 
me the clue ( nt and if b $ 
life PRE oat an organic, generatively intentive 
ly of a passively susceptible or inert nature. “2 7 1 
— and ¢atalytic, as in the ei wae guehor 
5 ag igo and ae eapsw se 
in the skin and the wom 7 irritability i a 
carneous lobes, as in peda pee and in ea = " 
