4<-lS47.1 



J^LILGARDENERS 



p it appears 



sayiug ^e sentence of execution so generally ca 



aa Jaiiis; them. Many of the \ 



-iWluD as trophies of the ^m4-p P n,v',di;i .,,. .. 



s equally unsparing of tl 





i) a.in.ir mat Provide! 



^tha/manliiS 



t from satisfactory 



SSor OUentd }£&* 5* ' Eli 



Allure, that in England and 1:... ' : : :i !' ,! th "< t! " « 



nuScaf'lawf' "• " *» ' ' > '■' ' '- v E 



raise tias fallen to pieces, and lies in ruin. 



In tngl.iiid, w'ni'i-e n.en j.reier fact to fiction and 

 expect ;.!. philosophy to be iein. 

 — -apleB, the dreamy mysticism ..f Oken will tind i,n!, 



■■■:■:• ' ..■ . . -..■'■■ 



his speculations have occasionally led matter-of-fact 

 -naided by the flare of Professor Okeu's torch. These 

 lings may be so.-although, so far as the vegetable 



'^philosophy. By Lorenz Oken. 

 tne German, for the Ray Society, 





T " that them" e8eor 0ke n wj 

 ^7" or gan8 o rilt1 ' 



^%eat Wgatls or an • t0 be based u P on tce 



Nfi. of . t W g iJ£ It from bel ™» aJdTJo C i^Sy 

 ^^Pr, n »g-eral.y adopted, at least in 



igher organism. Lov< 

 The primary u 



■ - 



r ; and thus indeed with< ut doubt in India, if the' 



i:,*t mountain. The fir* 

 s, whether plants or animals, emerged 



is of the sea 



Miscellaneous. 



Tref, or . 



, se.vred by a fine forest, in w 



e of Seringa tre< 







the famous theory of the creation of man, which we 1 Save 



also quoted; from which it appea rs that after all 



sundry modifications, | Professor Oken borrow his speculations from Hesiod. 



