| Abraham John Valpy - 1826 - 600 páginas
...crawling of a fly on the window. We find that these two operations are performed by the same means, the weight of the atmosphere, and that a sea-horse climbs the ice-hills by no other power. Can any thing be more strange to contemplate 'i Is there in all the fairy tales that ever were fancied... | |
| Abraham John Valpy - 1826 - 596 páginas
...crawling of a fly on the window. We find that these two operations are performed by the same means, the weight of the atmosphere, and that a sea-horse climbs the ice-hills by no other power. (Jan any thing be more strange to contemplate : Is there in all the fairy tales that ever were fancied... | |
| 1826 - 1138 páginas
...weight of the atmosphere, and that a sea-horse climbs the ice-hills by no other power. Can any thing be more strange to contemplate ? Is there in all the fairy tales that ever were fancied any thing more calculated to arrest the attention and to occupy and to gratify the... | |
| 1827 - 640 páginas
...crawling of a fly upon the window. We find that these two operations are performed by the same means, the weight of the atmosphere; and that a sea-horse climbs the ice-hills by no other power. Can any thing be more strange to contempl»te ? Is there in all the fairy tales that ever were fancied... | |
| Henry Peter Brougham (1st baron Brougham and Vaux.) - 1827 - 68 páginas
...crawling of a fly upon the window. We find that these two operations are performed by the same means, the weight of the atmosphere, and that a sea-horse climbs the ice-hills by no other power. Can any thing be more strange to contemplate ? Is there in all the fairy tales that ever were fancied any... | |
| Henry Brougham Baron Brougham and Vaux - 1828 - 248 páginas
...crawling of a fly upon the window. Yet we find that these two operations are performed by the same means, the weight of the atmosphere, and that a sea-horse...more strange to contemplate ? Is there in all the fairy-tales that ever were fancied anything more calculated to arrest the attention and to occupy and... | |
| 1828 - 496 páginas
...upon the window. We find that these two operations are performed by the same means, the weight of ihe atmosphere, and that a sea-horse climbs the ice-hills...contemplate ? Is there in all the fairy 'tales that ever were fancied, anything more calculated to arrest the attention and to occupy and to gratify the... | |
| 1829 - 522 páginas
...that these two operations are performed by the same means, the weight of the atmosphere, and that n sea-horse climbs the ice-hills by no other power....more strange to contemplate ? Is there in all the fairy-tales that ever were fancied anything more calculated to arrest the attention and to occupy and... | |
| 1829 - 522 páginas
...crawling of a fly upon the window. Yet we find that these two operations are performed by the same means, the weight of the atmosphere, and that a sea-horse climbs the ice-hills by no other power. Can any thing be more strange to contemplate ? Is there in all the fairy-tales that ever were fancied any... | |
| William Russell - 1828 - 910 páginas
...crawling of a fly upon the window. We find that these two operations are performed by the same means, the weight of the atmosphere, — and that a sea-horse climbs the ice-hills by no other power. Can any thing be more strange to contemplate ? Is there in all the fairy tales that ever were fancied any... | |
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