The Wonders of Nature and Art: Or, A Concise Account of Whatever is Most Curious and Remarkable in the World; Whether Relating to Its Animal, Vegetable and Mineral Productions, Or to the Manufactures, Buildings and Inventions of Its Inhabitants, Compiled from Historical and Geographical Works of Established Celebrity, and Illustrated with the Discoveries of Modern Travellers, Zväzok 5J. Walker, 1803 |
Vyhľadávanie v obsahu knihy
Výsledky 1 - 5 z 32.
Strana 20
... ancients was a gem of a purple colour tending to a blue , being indeed a va- riety of the amethyst ; but the modern hyacinth is of a red colour , with a mixture of yellow , and though less gaudy than the other red gems , the finest ...
... ancients was a gem of a purple colour tending to a blue , being indeed a va- riety of the amethyst ; but the modern hyacinth is of a red colour , with a mixture of yellow , and though less gaudy than the other red gems , the finest ...
Strana 22
... ancients , is a very beau- tiful and valuable gem in its purest and most per- fect state ; but such are rarely to be met with , and the less perfect ones are of little value . Those of the Indies are the finest in the world , but they ...
... ancients , is a very beau- tiful and valuable gem in its purest and most per- fect state ; but such are rarely to be met with , and the less perfect ones are of little value . Those of the Indies are the finest in the world , but they ...
Strana 34
... ancients than the moderns , and are at present more esteemed abroad than in England . There are five kinds of this fruit , the first called the Indian or black myrobalans , which are more slender and nar- rower than any of the rest ...
... ancients than the moderns , and are at present more esteemed abroad than in England . There are five kinds of this fruit , the first called the Indian or black myrobalans , which are more slender and nar- rower than any of the rest ...
Strana 48
... ancients , and so they are at this day by several of the Indian princes . Tavernier was told that the Great Mogul kept three or four thousand elephants ; but the chief master assured him he had not above five hundred , which were kept ...
... ancients , and so they are at this day by several of the Indian princes . Tavernier was told that the Great Mogul kept three or four thousand elephants ; but the chief master assured him he had not above five hundred , which were kept ...
Strana 81
... ancients as the daughter of fire , is a native of India , though not peculiar to that country . One of the largest of this species , preserved in the late French king's cabinet , is seven inches five lines in length , from the end of ...
... ancients as the daughter of fire , is a native of India , though not peculiar to that country . One of the largest of this species , preserved in the late French king's cabinet , is seven inches five lines in length , from the end of ...
Iné vydania - Zobraziť všetky
The Wonders of Nature and Art: Or, A Concise Account of Whatever ..., Zväzok 5 Thomas Smith Úplné zobrazenie - 1803 |
Časté výrazy a frázy
adorned altar ancient animal appears Asiatic Aurengzebe bamboo Banda islands bark beautiful belly bezoar birds body Boodhoo Borneo Brahmins branches building called camphor cave centre Ceylon colour commonly consists covered diamonds distance earth east East-Indies elephant elephanta cave entrance European excavation extremely eyes feathers feet high female figure fire four fruit green grows hair hand head height Hindoo hundred inches India Indies inhabitants island kind labourers leaves legs length Madhew manner marble Molucca islands monsoons mosque mouth natives neck nutmegs observed ornaments pagoda palisadoes Patna Pegu phant piece pillars proboscis quadrupeds recess remarkable resembling rhinoceros river rock roof round salamander sculptures side skin sometimes sort species square stone Sumatra tail taste Tavernier temple terrace thick Tinian tion tree trunk Veeshnu wall whole winds wings wood yellow
Populárne pasáže
Strana 200 - Go to the Ant, thou Sluggard, consider her ways, and be wise: which having no guide, overseer, or ruler, provideth her meat in the summer, and gathereth her food in the harvest.
Strana 263 - The discovery of America, and that of a passage to the East Indies by the Cape of Good Hope, are the two greatest and most important events recorded in the history of mankind.
Strana 207 - Many curious and striking particulars are related of the great devastations committed by this powerful community, which construct roads, or rather covered ways, diverging in all directions from the nest, and leading to every object of plunder within their reach. Though the mischiefs they commit are very great, such is the economy of nature, that...
Strana 177 - ... at ten feet from the well. Grooves of the like depth, or height, and four feet diftant from each other at the outer part of the outer circle, are carried...
Strana 28 - In winter the Gymnosophists enjoy the benefit of the sun's rays in the open air ; and in summer, when the heat becomes excessive, they pass their time in cool and moist places, under large trees ; which, according to the accounts of Nearchus, cover a circumference of five acres, and extend their branches so far, that ten thousand men may easily find shelter under them.
Strana 74 - In general he was not voracious, but never appeared satiated with grasshoppers ; and passed the whole night, while the hot season lasted, in prowling for them : when a grasshopper, or any insect, alighted within his reach, his eyes, which he fixed on his prey, glowed with uncommon fire ; and, having drawn himself back to spring on it with greater force, he seized the victim with both his fore-paws, but held it in one of them while he devoured it.
Strana 50 - Again, a painter was desirous of drawing the elephant kept in the menagerie at Versailles in an uncommon attitude, which was that of holding his trunk raised up in the air, with his mouth open. The painter's boy, in order to keep the animal in this posture, threw fruit into his mouth ; but as he...
Strana 48 - At length he was seized with one of his periodical fits of rage, broke from his fetters, and, running through the market, put the crowd to flight, and among others this woman, who in her haste forgot a little child she had brought with her. The animal...
Strana 251 - ... in leaves and cloth, and others tearing to pieces all the cloth which had belonged to her. In another houfe hard by, the men of the village, with a great many others from the neighbouring towns, were fitting drinking foura and fmoaking tobacco.
Strana 263 - Europe, after the discovery of a passage to India by the Cape of Good Hope ; the...