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Show 76 $V continue s to has ho,dJ Imagi.ne But been. out metal tools! ed No the .the. mammoth, that wonder his metal tools,: ... ares, for his a:di(fent .I and dark erecting and occupied iron in emergen dwelling houses, gran and vaults, and for and implements, dingy caves, (excepting comfortable other the Ll, and other roomy quite became existence matter. necessuj7of had been tools and weapons of the stone age The a disposess- bronze copper, chisels struggle The dead! he Palaeolithic the of in possession of his the wi th- hyenarand end temples for his gods! \stoeouses, seplchers the the did/until pla of abode, cave-dwellings, adzes, hammers, axes, commenced he nd ies)" came nhabi ed longer no I:-.e after he But Age. know he their of ! stone ,age the bear, only stone wi th permanent in the clearings, to make earth, during the rhinoceros, we as the his houses, quadrupeds that preceded him, tm imself, :rYing covered physical be Lng that he the remins man that his building _him as imagineman forests primeyal dens-e long as the ' __ ostsimple kinds; little was*still higher;natur attempts:at aQ ?y the his more asserted than will snse is now aall supply of the metals, marqh of mine, '- evidenced is shaping his then, by his primitive as and that showing thus already noticed; his already, implements, and tools well as inspirations. their to the various According to Schrader, Meallumfrom is and--- first and relative appearance1 ... workings, simple wants;- for he and But animal. as attention Aryan languages, the in few man's dominating ertdowment,- and civilization. Metallon and called mere qavern decol'ations the basisof his higher We a itself, ornamentation, artistic with his commensurate which the derived, later-- odern the I. worqln of sources importnce Greak the in the and Latin . .&. mos 0 f'ne so- but the originally meant "nothing metal. It has been sought to |