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" Let me hear from you soon, if you are not angry. I have been reading the Bridgewater treatise, and am now trying to understand Prout upon Chemistry. I shall be worth something at last, shall I not? Who knows but what I may die a glorious death under the pons asinorum after all? Prout (if I succeed in understanding him) does not hold that matter is infinitely divisible; and so I suppose the seeds of matter — the ultimate molecules — are a kind of tertium quid between matter and spirit. Certainly I can’t believe that any kind of matter, primal or ultimate, can be indivisible, which it must according to his view. Chalmers’s treatise is, as to eloquence, surpassingly beautiful; as to matter, I could not walk with him all the way, although I longed to do it, for he walked on flowers, and under shade— ‘no tree on which a fine bird did not sit. "

Elizabeth Barrett Browning , Complete Works of Elizabeth Barrett Browning


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Elizabeth Barrett Browning quote : Let me hear from you soon, if you are not angry. I have been reading the Bridgewater treatise, and am now trying to understand Prout upon Chemistry. I shall be worth something at last, shall I not? Who knows but what I may die a glorious death under the pons asinorum after all? Prout (if I succeed in understanding him) does not hold that matter is infinitely divisible; and so I suppose the seeds of matter — the ultimate molecules — are a kind of tertium quid between matter and spirit. Certainly I can’t believe that any kind of matter, primal or ultimate, can be indivisible, which it must according to his view. Chalmers’s treatise is, as to eloquence, surpassingly beautiful; as to matter, I could not walk with him all the way, although I longed to do it, for he walked on flowers, and under shade— ‘no tree on which a fine bird did not sit.