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

Majoric Polyglamour Sectory 04
Page 06

Think of all the ways Majoric Polyglamour has helped your friends.

Majoric Polyglamour

Majoric Polyglamour Home
Majoric Polyglamour Sitemap
Majoric Polyglamour Sct 01
Majoric Polyglamour Sct 02
Majoric Polyglamour Sct 03
Majoric Polyglamour Sct 04
Majoric Polyglamour Sct 05
Majoric Polyglamour Sct 06
Majoric Polyglamour Sct 07
Majoric Polyglamour Sct 08
Majoric Polyglamour Sct 09
Majoric Polyglamour Sct 10
Majoric Polyglamour Sct 11
Majoric Polyglamour Sct 12
Majoric Polyglamour Sct 13
Majoric Polyglamour Sct 14
Majoric Polyglamour Sct 15
Majoric Polyglamour Sct 16
Majoric Polyglamour Sct 17
Majoric Polyglamour Sct 18
Majoric Polyglamour Sct 19
Majoric Polyglamour Sct 20
Majoric Polyglamour Sct 21
Majoric Polyglamour Sct 22
Majoric Polyglamour Sct 23
Majoric Polyglamour Sct 24

Majoric Polyglamour Sectory 04
Page 06

That there is a close likeness between all these bodies is obvious from the fact that when any of them is strongly heated, or allowed to putrefy, it gives off the same sort of disagreeable smell; and careful chemical analysis has shown that they are, in fact, all composed of the elements carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, and nitrogen, combined in very nearly the same proportions. Indeed, charcoal, which is impure carbon, might be obtained by strongly heating either a handful of corn, or a piece of fowl's flesh, in a vessel from which the air is excluded so as to keep the corn or the flesh from burning. And if the vessel were a still, so that the products of this destructive distillation, as it is called, could be condensed and collected, we should find water and ammonia, in some shape or other, in the receiver. Now ammonia is a compound of the elementary bodies, nitrogen and hydrogen; therefore both nitrogen and hydrogen must have been contained in the bodies from which it is derived.

One more remark upon the subject of colour. Now-a-days civilized peoples, as well as many of the ruder races that the former govern, wear clothes. In other words they have dodged the sun, by developing, with the aid of mind, a complex society that includes the makers of white drill suits and solar helmets. But, under such conditions, the colour of one's skin becomes more or less of a luxury. Protective pigment, at any rate now-a-days, counts for little as compared with capacity for social service. Colour, in short, is rapidly losing its vital function. Will it therefore tend to disappear? In the long run, it would seem--perhaps only in the very long run--it will become dissociated from that general fitness to survive under particular climatic conditions of which it was once the innate mark. Be this as it may, race-prejudice, that is so largely founded on sheer considerations of colour, is bound to decay, if and when the races of darker colour succeed in displaying, on the average, such qualities of mind as will enable them to compete with the whites on equal terms, in a world which is coming more and more to include all climates.



[ Dir 04 Part 01 ] [ Dir 04 Part 02 ] [ Dir 04 Part 03 ] [ Dir 04 Part 04 ] [ Dir 04 Part 05 ] [ Dir 04 Part 06 ]
[ Dir 04 Part 07 ] [ Dir 04 Part 08 ] [ Dir 04 Part 09 ] [ Dir 04 Part 10 ] [ Dir 04 Part 11 ] [ Dir 04 Part 12 ]


This document is Copyright © 2008 Majoric Polyglamour. All rights reserved. Do not copy either electronically or otherwise without permission. Links and references to other Websites are not endorsements. Majoric Polyglamour provides no guarantees or warrantees concerning other sites. Links are only provided as a courtesy and for entertainment purposes only.