The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction - Volume 12, No. 339, November 8, 1828 by Various
page 42 of 54 (77%)
page 42 of 54 (77%)
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CATS AND FELINE ANIMALS (_once more!_) Animals of the cat kind are, in a state of nature almost continually in action both by night and by day. They either walk, creep, or advance rapidly by prodigious bounds; but they seldom _run_, owing, it is believed, to the extreme flexibility of their limbs and vertebral column, which cannot preserve the rigidity necessary to that species of movement. Their sense of sight, especially during twilight, is acute; their hearing very perfect, and their perception of smell less so than in the dog tribe. Their most obtuse sense is that of taste; the lingual nerve in the lion, according to Des Moulins, being no larger than that of a middle-sized dog. In fact, the tongue of these animals is as much an organ of mastication as of taste; its sharp and horny points, inclined backwards, being used for tearing away the softer parts of the animal substances on which they prey. The perception of touch is said to reside very delicately in the small bulbs at the base of the mustachios.--_Wilson's Zoology_. * * * * * TEA AND TAY. _From Blackwood's last "Noctes."_ _North_. As you love me, my dear James, call it not tea, but _tay_. That though obsolete, is the classical pronunciation. Thus |
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