Thus, it has been remarked by Sir David Brewster, in his Letters on Natural Magic (letter vii.
Brewster, in his entertaining Letters on Natural Magic (letter iv.
Brewster, in his Letters on Natural Magic, point to the presence of incipient nervous disorder.
If, therefore, we have reported metaphysic deficient, it must follow that we do the like of natural magic, which hath relation thereunto.
Brewster’s Introductory Letter on Natural Magic will be read with interest and advantage.
Mendel," before mentioned, these feats are regarded by many as effected by natural magic, notwithstanding what has been said above respecting the services of evil Jinn being procured by means of perfumes.
There are certain modes of divination which cannot properly be classed under the head of spiritual magic, but require a place between the account of this science and that of natural magic.
Mendel" is by some supposed to be effected by the aid of evil Jinn; but the more enlightened of the Muslims regard it as a branch of natural magic.
The subject of Natural Magic is one of great extent as well as of deep interest.
The silver tablets of the photographic artist receiving fixed impressions of the objects represented in the dark chamber by a lens, are far superior as examples of natural magic.
We learn, from the scientific facts which we have been discussing, a few of the secrets of natural magic.
In Natural Magic, by Sir David Brewster, several curious experiments belonging to this class are named.
Among the many curious instances of natural magic, none are more remarkable than an experiment not long since proposed, by which Daguerreotype pictures may be taken in absolute darkness to the human eye.
Natural magic is a science in which all the mysterious acts that are wrought, are compassed by natural spirits.
If natural magic be exercised about the most holy operations, it is then mixed with the divine, and may then be called, not improperly, natural-divine magic.
The mode of divination called Darb el-Mendel is by some supposed to be effected by the aid of evil Jinn; but the more enlightened of the Muslims regard it as a branch of natural magic.
This Essay we suppose to have been the original of the pamphlet to which Sir David Brewster alludes in his letters on Natural Magic, and which he has no hesitation in declaring a thorough and satisfactory explanation.
In Brewster's Letters on Natural Magic, we have an account of the most remarkable.
In 1682, Simon Witgeest of Amsterdam, Holland, wrote an admirable work, whose title reads "Book of Natural Magic.
In quite a few works on automata, notably Sir David Brewster's "Letters on Natural Magic," Collinson is quoted as having interviewed Maillardet as the inventor of the combination writing and drawing figure.
Theurgy differs from natural magic, which is performed by the powers of nature; and from necromancy, which is operated only by the invocation of the demons.
De Rochas, in an interesting work, Les Origines de la Science, has given in detail Heron's accounts of these wonderful automata and experiments in natural magic.
Prior to Cagliostro's time a set of men arose calling themselves faiseurs, who practiced the art of sleight-of-hand, allied to natural magic.
The art of natural magic, then, dates back to the remotest periods of antiquity.
Out of these abstruse studies grew Faust's wonderful dream of an ecstatic spirit-life to be attained by natural magic.
The fundamental assumption of natural magic is that the universe as a whole and each component part of it is dominated by an indwelling spirit with whom it is possible for the magician to get into communication.
Further on he shows that he is a master of that art too, but at first he is concerned with "natural magic," which some of the old mystics whom Goethe read conceived as the highest and divinest of sciences.
Matthew Arnold somewhere tells us that all great poetry has one or both of two attributes: "Natural Magic" and "Moral Profundity.
Natural Magic" is that which acts upon us as a holiday influence, compounded perhaps of beauty, mystery, fear or sentiment, which for the moment or for eternity gives our minds entrance into a realm of new and pleasurable things.
Read Samuel Taylor Coleridge's "Kubla Khan" and you will find the essence of natural magic.
Footnote 4: Most ancient authors, who pretend to treat of the wonders of natural magic, give receipts for calling up phantoms.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "natural magic" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.