Spectacle de la Nature: Or Nature Display'd: Being Discourses on Such Particulars of Natural History as Were Thought Most Proper to Excite the Curiosty, and Form the Minds of Youth. : Illustrated with Copper-plates, Volumen2L. Davis and C. Reymers, J. Rivington, J. Buckland, R. Baldwin ... [and 6 others], 1766 |
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Página 42
... Grains . His Servant , who had been inftructed how to act , immediately caught up the Robe , and folded it over the Seeds that were faftened to it . The next Year , the Counsellor fhared the Produce of his inno- cent Theft among his ...
... Grains . His Servant , who had been inftructed how to act , immediately caught up the Robe , and folded it over the Seeds that were faftened to it . The next Year , the Counsellor fhared the Produce of his inno- cent Theft among his ...
Página 157
... Grain that is almost melting . Counters . When the Bon - Chrétien is too breaking and coarse , we can teach the Fire to correct and render it a very agreeable Regale . In March and April . The Months of March and April have no Stock but ...
... Grain that is almost melting . Counters . When the Bon - Chrétien is too breaking and coarse , we can teach the Fire to correct and render it a very agreeable Regale . In March and April . The Months of March and April have no Stock but ...
Página 182
... Grain has its Utefulness and Propriety , of which Man is always the ultimate End . Some are in- tended for his own Nourishment , others for the Subfistence of the Beasts that ferve him , or to fatten those whofe Flesh is part of his ...
... Grain has its Utefulness and Propriety , of which Man is always the ultimate End . Some are in- tended for his own Nourishment , others for the Subfistence of the Beasts that ferve him , or to fatten those whofe Flesh is part of his ...
Página 183
... Grain they felect for their Food , agreeably to their Tafte and Cir- cumftances . In Confequence , therefore , of the wife Propor- tion , which Providence has established between the Nature of Lands , and the Diverfity of Grain ; every ...
... Grain they felect for their Food , agreeably to their Tafte and Cir- cumftances . In Confequence , therefore , of the wife Propor- tion , which Providence has established between the Nature of Lands , and the Diverfity of Grain ; every ...
Página 185
... Grain ; as Oats , and Barley ; Lupines , Lentiles , and fome other kinds , which are called March , because they are fown in that Month , or rather in April . The third Divifion is fuffered to lie fallow , but is not altogether inactive ...
... Grain ; as Oats , and Barley ; Lupines , Lentiles , and fome other kinds , which are called March , because they are fown in that Month , or rather in April . The third Divifion is fuffered to lie fallow , but is not altogether inactive ...
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Spectacle de la Nature: Or, Nature Display'd. Being Discourses on ..., Volumen2 Noel Antoine Pluche Sin vista previa disponible - 2018 |
Términos y frases comunes
afford agreeable almoft Bark Beauty becauſe Beds beft beſt Branches caufe cauſe Champaign Chevalier Chives Colours compofed confequence confiderable Corn Count Countefs Countess Cultivation defirous difpofed Difpofition Diſtance eafily Earth efteemed Endive fame fecond fecure feems feven feveral fhall fhoot fhould fince firft firſt Flavour Flowers fmall fome fometimes foon Forefts formed fown Froft Fruits ftill ftrong fuch fufficient fuftain fupply furniſh Garden Grafting Grain Grapes greateſt Ground Growth himſelf ibid Inftance inftead intermixed Intermixture itſelf Juices Kitchen-Garden laft Land leaft Leaves lefs likewife Liquor Manner Manure Method moft moſt muſt Nature neceffary Nouriſhment Number obferve Parterre particular Pears Perfons Plants pleafing pleaſe Pleaſure poffible prefent preferve Prefs Prior produced proper Pruning raiſed refemble rendered Rheims rife Roots Sallets Seafon Seed ſeveral Soil Species Stem Subftance thefe themſelves theſe thofe thoſe Trees Tulips ufual uſeful Uſefulneſs Vafes Veffel Vine Water whofe whoſe Wine Wood
Pasajes populares
Página 83 - A fire devoureth before them; and behind them a flame burneth: the land is as the garden of Eden before them, and behind them a desolate wilderness; yea, and nothing shall escape them.
Página 104 - many people will b2 surprised to see me direct the making of flues under a greenhouse ; but though perhaps it may happen that there will be no necessity to make any fires in them for two or three years together, yet in very hard winters they will prove extremely useful.
Página 104 - Tool-Houie, that fo it may be quite hid from the Sight, and be in the Dry ; and the Fuel may be laid in the fame Place, whereby it will be always ready for Ufe. I...
Página 271 - Incitions, one towards the Head, and the other at the Bottom of the Trunk. The Bark is removed without being mattered, and is then foftened in Water; after which it is placed over a Bed of burning Coals, which blackens its outward Surface. When this Operation is over, it is worked into a Level by a Weight of.
Página 21 - ... with their shining Colours, but the greatest part of them, in order to render the Entertainment more exquisite, diffuse a fragrance that perfumes all the Air around us; and it should seem as if they were solicitous to reserve their Odours for the Evening and Morn, when walking is most agreeable, and their Sweets are very faint, during the heat of the day, when we visit them the least.
Página 259 - Their afcent is very moderate, and they may be acceffible to his hand that forms them. But the Deity has referved the trees of the foreft to himfelf; and, though he alfo gives exigence and growth to every other plant, the forefts alone may be confidered as his garden : They have been planted by no hand but his ; and he is the only being who affords them their cultivation ; he diffufes their minute feeds over the furface of a whole country ; his wife precaution has...
Página 104 - I would advife a Flue of about ten Inches in Width, and two Feet deep, to be carried the whole Length of the Houfe, and...
Página 261 - ... her own fubftance. If the repeated loppings of thickets and forefts, were to be all thrown together for fome ages, they would form piles as high as the mountains themfelves, on which they were cut; and if the earth either produced the woods, or nourifhed them from her own bowels, thefe would be all confutned t 275 ) confumed by degrees.
Página 259 - ... of a few fathoms from each other, and are frequently feparated by the fcanty fpace of four or five feet. Who formed the plan of thefe mighty works, and conducted them to their ultimate perfecton ? What gardener charged himfelf with the plantation of this amazing number of trees?
Página 12 - The greatelt part of them not only regale our View with the Beauty and Arrangement of their Colours, but gently delight our Smell with an exquifite Perfume ; and «hen they have gratified our Senfes with an innocent Satisfaction, the Mind dill difclofes Wonder» in them