A System of Geography, Popular and Scientific: Or A Physical, Political, and Statistical Account of the World and Its Various Divisions, Volume 1A. Fullarton and Company, 1832 |
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Page vi
... latter ages of general illumination , has it become a national object to the most enlightened people of the earth , and a fond enterprise to her most adventurous children , to lift the veil which has so long concealed the secrets of the ...
... latter ages of general illumination , has it become a national object to the most enlightened people of the earth , and a fond enterprise to her most adventurous children , to lift the veil which has so long concealed the secrets of the ...
Page xvii
... latter body will , from the nature of the physical laws which regulate the movements of the planets , employ a longer time in passing through that season than our winter . This occasions the summer in the northern hemisphere to be about ...
... latter body will , from the nature of the physical laws which regulate the movements of the planets , employ a longer time in passing through that season than our winter . This occasions the summer in the northern hemisphere to be about ...
Page xxxiv
... latter , while the height of the highest mountain is not equal to the 4000th part of it . Upon the largest globe that is ever constructed , these differences of the earth from an exact sphere could not be perceived ; and the artificial ...
... latter , while the height of the highest mountain is not equal to the 4000th part of it . Upon the largest globe that is ever constructed , these differences of the earth from an exact sphere could not be perceived ; and the artificial ...
Page xxxviii
... latter place from the former , or the angle of position sought . XVIII . To find all those places on the earth to which the sun at a given time is rising or setting ; also what places are then illuminated by the sun , or in darkness ...
... latter place from the former , or the angle of position sought . XVIII . To find all those places on the earth to which the sun at a given time is rising or setting ; also what places are then illuminated by the sun , or in darkness ...
Page xlviii
... latter in Saxony . In the former the animal remains are human bones alone ; whilst in the latter they are mingled with those of other animals , both extinct and existing . ? " It is curious to observe , " says a writer in the 18th ...
... latter in Saxony . In the former the animal remains are human bones alone ; whilst in the latter they are mingled with those of other animals , both extinct and existing . ? " It is curious to observe , " says a writer in the 18th ...
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Common terms and phrases
Alps ancient animals annually appearance army Austria Baltic Bavaria Black Sea Bohemia British miles called Cattegat century Charles Christian church circle climate coast cold commerce considerable contains Copenhagen crown Danes Danish Danube degree Denmark districts divided duchy duke earth Elbe elector elector of Saxony elevation emperor empire English equator Europe extent feet France Frederic French Funen German globe Gulf Gustavus height Holstein Iceland inhabitants islands Italy Jutland king kingdom lakes land language Lapland latitude latter Lauenburg laws longitude Lubec Lutheran meridian mountains navigation northern Norway Norwegian ocean peace Petersburg Poland Pope population possession prince principal produced provinces quantity reign rein-deer Rhine rises river Roman Russia Russian empire Saxony Silesia situated Sleswick snow soil southern species square miles Stoerthing stream surface Sweden Swedish Swedish Lapland throne town tribes vegetation whole winds winter zone
Popular passages
Page 124 - AND the Lord spake unto Moses, saying, See, I have called by name Bezaleel the son of Uri, the son of Hur, of the tribe of Judah : and I have filled him with the spirit of God, in wisdom, and in understanding, and in knowledge, and in all manner of workmanship...
Page lxxvi - On the 15th of August, 1643, as I stood at my window, I was surprised with a most wonderful delectable vision. The sea that washes the Sicilian shore swelled up and became, for ten miles in length, like a chain of dark mountains ; while the waters near our Calabrian coast grew quite smooth, and in an instant appeared as one clear polished mirror, reclining against the ridge.
Page 175 - The work is no sooner begun, than one of the family, selected on purpose, advances to a seat near the lamp, and commences the evening lecture, which generally consists of some old saga, or such other histories as are to be obtained on the island. Being but badly supplied with printed books, the Icelanders are under the necessity of copying such as they can get the loan of, which sufficiently accounts for the fact, that most of them write a hand equal in beauty to that of the ablest writing-masters...
Page xxxvi - ... places by the eastern side of the horizon, the sun is just setting, and to those by the western side, he is just rising.
Page lxxvi - On this glass was depicted, in chiaro scuro, a string of several thousands of pilasters, all equal in altitude, distance, and degree of light and shade. In a moment they lost half their height, and bent into arcades, like Roman aqueducts. A long cornice was next formed on the top, and above it rose castles innumerable, all perfectly alike. These soon split into towers, which were shortly after lost in colonnades, then windows, and at last ended in pines, cypresses, and other trees, even and similar....
Page 220 - Lapland, is no longer heard in this scene of desolation ; the ruggedness of the dark grey rock is not covered by a single shrub ; the only music is the hoarse murmuring of the waves, ever and anon renewing their assaults on the huge masses that oppose them. The northern sun, creeping at midnight at the distance of five diameters along the horizon, and the immeasurable ocean, in apparent contact with the skies, form the grand outlines in the sublime picture presented to the astonished spectator.
Page lxiii - Lucar, the captain of the ship Nancy felt his vessel so violently shaken, that he thought she had struck the ground, but, on heaving the lead, found a great depth of water. Captain Clark, from Denia, in latitude 36° 24...
Page 124 - After two hours had been spent in various ceremonies, the archbishop advanced, holding forth a cross, which all the people crowded to embrace, squeezing each other nearly to suffocation. As soon, however, as their eagerness had been somewhat satisfied, he retired to the sacristy...
Page lxviii - While the thunder-cloud is swelling and extending itself over a large tract of country, the lightning is seen to dart from one part of it to another, and often to illuminate its whole mass. When the cloud has acquired a sufficient extent, the lightning strikes between the cloud and the earth in two opposite places, the path of the lightning lying through the whole body of the cloud and its branches. The longer this lightning continues, the...
Page 114 - The solemnization of marriages takes place only once a year, and that on a fixed day in the teeming autumn. Before this time arrives, the expectant lover is not permitted, by the custom of the land, to pay his addresses in person to the object of his wishes : his offer is made by sending a piece of money, that is accepted or not as the fair one is inclined to approve or reject his suit; but both the conveyance of this token of love and the whole of the after-ceremonials of courtship are carried on...