Chambers's Information for the People, 1. köideWilliam Chambers, Robert Chambers W. & R. Chambers, 1842 |
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Page 46
... France , 172 Columbus , discoveries of , 353 Americans , manners of the ,. 333 Brahminism , 738 Comets , 5 • Amphibia , natural history of , Anatomy of Man , 488 Brain and nerves of man , 549 COMMERCE - MONEY - BANKS , 673-688 545 ...
... France , 172 Columbus , discoveries of , 353 Americans , manners of the ,. 333 Brahminism , 738 Comets , 5 • Amphibia , natural history of , Anatomy of Man , 488 Brain and nerves of man , 549 COMMERCE - MONEY - BANKS , 673-688 545 ...
Page 46
... France , description of , 468 France , restoration in , 94 France , trade and agriculture of , 247 Franklin , life and maxims of , 219 French codes of law , French revolution , the , • 172 Ireland , description of , 37 Ireland , English ...
... France , description of , 468 France , restoration in , 94 France , trade and agriculture of , 247 Franklin , life and maxims of , 219 French codes of law , French revolution , the , • 172 Ireland , description of , 37 Ireland , English ...
Page 46
... France of 1803 , Watering places in England , Thebes , ruined city of , Theology , Natural , THE PRIVATE DUTIES OF LIFE , THE OCEAN - MARITIME DISCO- VERY NAVIGATION , THE WHALE AND WHALE - FISH- ERIES , 401-416 United States ...
... France of 1803 , Watering places in England , Thebes , ruined city of , Theology , Natural , THE PRIVATE DUTIES OF LIFE , THE OCEAN - MARITIME DISCO- VERY NAVIGATION , THE WHALE AND WHALE - FISH- ERIES , 401-416 United States ...
Page 9
... France , the observatory of Paris ; and in England , that of Green- wich . Longitude is reckoned either east or west of the first meridian ; and 180 is therefore the utmost degree of longitude . Some geographers , however , reckon ...
... France , the observatory of Paris ; and in England , that of Green- wich . Longitude is reckoned either east or west of the first meridian ; and 180 is therefore the utmost degree of longitude . Some geographers , however , reckon ...
Page 18
... France , for plants and animals are found , showing that when these example , transition rocks are in many places wanting . rocks were formed , the earth had become a scene of The rule , nevertheless , is certain with respect to the ...
... France , for plants and animals are found , showing that when these example , transition rocks are in many places wanting . rocks were formed , the earth had become a scene of The rule , nevertheless , is certain with respect to the ...
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acres America amount ancient animals appearance army banks beautiful Britain British building called canals Catholic century CHAMBERS'S EDINBURGH JOURNAL character chief chiefly church climate coast colony commerce considerable contains cultivated Diemen's Land distance district Dublin earth east Egypt emigrants empire England English established Europe extent favourable feet France French Greece ground harbour houses improvement inhabitants Ireland island Italy kind king kingdom labour lake length London Lord manufactures ment miles mountains Myriogrammes nation native nearly northern Parliament period persons population Port portion possesses present prince principal produce race racter reign remarkable respect river ROBERT CHAMBERS rock Roman Russia Scotland settlement settlers ships side situated soil South Wales Spain square miles stone Street tion town trade tribes United Kingdom Upper Canada Van Diemen's Land various vessels whole Zealand
Popular passages
Page 115 - If these writings of the Greeks agree with the book of God, they are useless, and need not be preserved ; if they disagree, they are pernicious, and ought to be destroyed.
Page 119 - To this principle must be ascribed the superstitious devotion with which Christians, from the earliest ages of the church, were accustomed to visit that country which the Almighty had selected as the inheritance of his favourite people, and in which the Son of God had accomplished the redemption of mankind. As this distant pilgrimage could not bo performed without considerable expense, fatigue, and danger, it appeared the more meritorious, and came to be considered as an expiation for almost every...
Page 109 - The public roads were accurately divided by milestones, and ran in a direct line from one city to another, with very little respect for the obstacles either of nature or private property. Mountains were perforated, and bold arches thrown over the broadest and most rapid streams.
Page 174 - Society is constituted for the purpose of forwarding a brotherhood of affection, a communion of rights, and an union of power among Irishmen of every religious persuasion, and thereby to obtain a complete reform in the legislature, founded on the principles of civil, political, and religious liberty.
Page 25 - We shall view them with less contempt, when we learn from the records of geological history, that there was a time when reptiles not only constituted the chief tenants and most powerful possessors of the earth, but extended their dominion also over the waters of the seas ; and that the annals of their history may be traced back through thousands of years, antecedent to that latest point in the progressive stages of animal creation, when the first parents of the human race were called into existence.
Page 26 - In external form these animals somewhat resemble our modern bats and vampires : most of them had the nose elongated, like the snout of a crocodile, and armed with conical teeth. Their eyes were of enormous size, apparently enabling them to fly by night. From their wings projected fingers, terminated by long hooks, like the curved claw on the thumb of the bat. These must have formed a powerful paw, wherewith the animal was enabled to creep or climb, or suspend itself from trees. It is probable, also,...
Page 110 - The advantage of receiving the earliest intelligence, and of conveying their orders with celerity, induced the emperors to establish throughout their extensive dominions, the regular institution of posts.
Page 110 - Such was the solid construction of the Roman highways, whose firmness has not entirely yielded to the effort of fifteen centuries. They united the subjects of the most distant provinces by an easy and familiar intercourse ; but their primary object had been to facilitate the marches of the legions ; nor was any country considered as completely subdued, till it had been rendered, in all its parts, pervious to the arms and authority of the conqueror.
Page 119 - Charlemagne in France, and Alfred the Great in England, endeavoured to dispel this darkness, and gave their subjects a short glimpse of light and knowledge. But the ignorance of the age was too powerful for their efforts and institutions. The darkness returned, and settled over Europe more thick and heavy than before.
Page 56 - ... nearly to the human figure. Thus there is one species of the ape tribe, in which the head has a facial angle of forty-two degrees ; in another animal of the same family, which is one of those simits approaching most closely to the human figure, the facial angle contains exactly fifty degrees.