| The first excerpt represents the past or something you must release, and is drawn from Faraday as a Discoverer by John Tyndall: current; it allows free transmission without the development of
heat. The bad conductor is adiathermanous to the electric current,
and hence the passage of the latter is accompanied by the
development of heat. I am strongly inclined to hold the electric
current, pure and simple, to be a motion of the ether alone; good
conductors being so constituted that the motion may be propagated
through their ether without sensible transfer to their atoms, while
in the case of bad conductors this transfer is effected, the
transferred motion appearing as heat.[2]
I do not know whether Faraday would have subscribed to what is here
written; probably his habitual caution would have prevented him from
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The second excerpt represents the present or the deciding factor of the moment, and is drawn from The Deserted Woman by Honore de Balzac: schemes for introducing himself into this unknown lady's presence,
without a thought of their impracticability. Morning after morning was
spent in this way to mighty purpose; but with each day's walk, that
vision of a woman living apart from the world, of love's martyr buried
in solitude, loomed larger in his thoughts, and was enshrined in his
soul. So Gaston de Nueil walked under the walls of Courcelles, and
some gardener's heavy footstep would set his heart beating high with
hope.
He thought of writing to Mme. de Beauseant, but on mature
consideration, what can you say to a woman whom you have never seen, a
complete stranger? And Gaston had little self-confidence. Like most
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The third excerpt represents the future or something you must embrace, and is drawn from The Voyage Out by Virginia Woolf: their type is any proof of frivolity and ignorance, there is no
doubt that English people scarce consider news read there as news,
any more than a programme bought from a man in the street inspires
confidence in what it says. A very respectable elderly pair,
having inspected the long tables of newspapers, did not think it
worth their while to read more than the headlines.
"The debate on the fifteenth should have reached us by now,"
Mrs. Thornbury murmured. Mr. Thornbury, who was beautifully clean
and had red rubbed into his handsome worn face like traces of paint
on a weather-beaten wooden figure, looked over his glasses and saw
that Miss Allan had _The_ _Times_.
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