Vegetable substances used for the food of man / [Edwin Lankester].
- Lankester, Edwin, 1814-1874.
- Date:
- 1832
Licence: Public Domain Mark
Credit: Vegetable substances used for the food of man / [Edwin Lankester]. Source: Wellcome Collection.
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![— QUADRUPEDS: illustrating their Habits and Peculiari- ties. Part II]. — ORIGINS AND ANTIQUITIES. Parr IV. — ZOOLOGY :—Birps. Parr V. — POPULAR CHEMISTRY. Parr VI.— SPORTS, PASTIMES, AND SUPERSTITIONS. Parr VII. —MECHANICS. Part VIN. — ZOOLOGY :— Amrpuisia, Insects, REPTILES, AND WoRMs. . To be followed by MAN, which will occupy a distinct part. Phenomena of the Weather. Botany. Surface and Interior of the Earth. Discoveries and Inventions. Arts and Manufactures. Pheno- mena of Light, Heat, Sound, Electricity, and Magnetism. = ‘Its beginning is pleasure, its progress knowledge, and its objects, truth and utility.’ Sir Humphry Davy. THe design of this Work is to present the enquiring Reader with just so many Facts of ‘ useful research,’ as may combine information with amusement ; and gratify cu- riosity upon hundreds of laudable topics, without fatigue or uninviting study. The fitness of the colloquial form adopted for conveying this knowledge, will immediately suggest itself to the reader, on recollecting how freely the terms ‘ wHy’ and ‘ BECAUSE’ are identified with our every enquiries and pursuits. At the same time, although conversational, the aim of ‘puHE Prain Wuy Anpv BECAUSE’ will be to condense ag much as perspicuity will allow : condensation being the result of time and experience, which reject what is no longer essen- tial. The subjects of ‘ rot Puain Wuy anv Bercausr’ will be almost as multitudinous, as the application of the terms themselves. Preference will nevertheless be given to such topics, as, from their general interest, are likely to pos- sess charms for the great mass of the reading public. Plain- ness of illustration will always be preferred to technical terms ; and world-knowledge, or common experience, may probably suggest much information which is not to be found in a connected form in books. All subjects that bear upon the arts of life, of society, and their common interests, are therefore recommended to the Editor’s special attention, from their attractive character, as well as from their fascinating form of conveying useful information.](https://iiif.wellcomecollection.org/image/b33027584_0016.jp2/full/800%2C/0/default.jpg)