Dante and the Early AstronomersA. Wingate, 1807 - 359 sider |
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Side 11
... horses , and some , in our own country are to be found who prefer puppy pies to every other . It is no uncommon thing to see dock- weed on their tables in Russia , as a salad , in prefer- ence to lettuce . The Germans eat snails , and ...
... horses , and some , in our own country are to be found who prefer puppy pies to every other . It is no uncommon thing to see dock- weed on their tables in Russia , as a salad , in prefer- ence to lettuce . The Germans eat snails , and ...
Side 25
... horse came exactly oppo- site to his , notwithstanding repeated attempts on her part , and the servant attending her , her horse would not go one inch past this gentleman's . This naturally brought on a conversation , and they tra ...
... horse came exactly oppo- site to his , notwithstanding repeated attempts on her part , and the servant attending her , her horse would not go one inch past this gentleman's . This naturally brought on a conversation , and they tra ...
Side 61
... horse , I saw a number of sa- vage - looking men and women gathering around me , demanding who and what I was ? In order to get the pamphlet , my hostess had set the bell through the town , offering a shilling for the book : and as it ...
... horse , I saw a number of sa- vage - looking men and women gathering around me , demanding who and what I was ? In order to get the pamphlet , my hostess had set the bell through the town , offering a shilling for the book : and as it ...
Side 165
... the cat is suspended , and its neck being denuded of the feathers , and well soaped or greased , to make it slippery , the savages riding below it raise themselves from the horses as far as they can to TRAVELS IN SCOTLAND . 165.
... the cat is suspended , and its neck being denuded of the feathers , and well soaped or greased , to make it slippery , the savages riding below it raise themselves from the horses as far as they can to TRAVELS IN SCOTLAND . 165.
Side 166
Mary Acworth Orr. themselves from the horses as far as they can to get hold of the gooses head , which it naturally raises up to avoid them . In this manner , while they ride under it , they try to get hold of its head ; and he who pulls ...
Mary Acworth Orr. themselves from the horses as far as they can to get hold of the gooses head , which it naturally raises up to avoid them . In this manner , while they ride under it , they try to get hold of its head ; and he who pulls ...
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Almindelige termer og sætninger
Aberdeen Abernethey Aichil Andrews antient appearance Bamff banks beautiful Bothwell Castle Bressay Sound burgh Caithness Caledonian canal called canal Cape Wrath Carse of Gowrie castle cattle church clergyman Clyde coast College Crieff dressed earl earl of Fife Edinburgh elegant England excellent extensive farmers feet Fife fish Fort Augustus gentleman Glasgow ground hand handsome head heard Highlands hills horse hundred improvement inhabitants Inverness islands kind lady laird land lately live Loch London lord manner married ment miles minister natural neighbourhood observed Orkneys parish perhaps Perth Picts poor pounds sterling professors proprietors river road rock scarcely Scotch Scotland Scots seems seen servants sheep Shetland Shetland Isles shew side situated sometimes Spey Stirling stone tain tenants thing thousand pounds tion town trees twenty woman wood young
Populære passager
Side 94 - The kingdom of heaven is like to a grain of mustard seed, which a man took, and sowed in his field : which indeed is the least of all seeds ; but when it is grown, it is the greatest among herbs, and becometh a tree, so that the birds of the air come and lodge in thq branches thereof.
Side 554 - Neither is it any quantity of knowledge how great soever that can make the mind of man to swell; for nothing can fill, much less extend, the soul of man, but God and the contemplation of God; and therefore Solomon speaking of the two principal senses of inquisition, the eye and the ear, affirmeth that the eye is never satisfied with seeing, nor the ear with hearing...
Side 52 - I beg and entreat of you, dear and special friend, as earnestly as I can, that you would have the goodness to undertake this expedition for the love of me, and to acquit my soul to our Lord and Saviour ; for I have that opinion of your nobleness and loyalty, that, if you undertake it, it cannot fail of success — and I shall die more contented ; but it must be executed as follows : — " I will, that as soon as I shall be dead, you take...
Side 599 - And it is to be hoped the day is not far distant when the farmers who allow thistles, ragweed, and the like, to seed on their fields, without having attempted to prevent them, will be subjected to a penalty •f.
Side 365 - I observed two magpies hopping round a gooseberry bush, in a small garden, near a poor-looking house, in a peculiar manner, and flying out and into the bush. I stepped aside to see what they were doing, and found, from the poor man and his wife, that...
Side 53 - ... you sufficient to perform your journey, as well as for all those whom you may choose to take with you in your train ; you will then deposit your charge at the holy sepulchre of our Lord, where he was buried, since my body cannot go there. You will not be sparing of expense...
Side 161 - How sweet to stand, when tempests tear the main, On the firm cliff, and mark the seaman's toil ! Not that another's danger soothes the soul, But from such toil how sweet to feel secure...
Side 53 - All those present began bewailing bitterly; and when the Lord James could speak, he said, 'Gallant and noble king, I return you a hundred thousand thanks for the high honour you do me, and for the valuable and dear treasure with which you...
Side 106 - Happy art thou, O Israel : who is like unto thee, O people saved by the Lord, the shield of thy help, and who is the sword of thy excellency ! and thine enemies shall be found liars unto thee ; and thou shalt tread upon their high places.
Side 103 - TUNE—" The Boatman." YE gales that gently wave the sea, And please the canny boatman, Bear me frae hence, or bring to me My brave, my bonny Scotman. In haly bands We join'd our hands, Yet may not this discover, While parents rate A large estate, Before a faithful lover. But I...