A System of Geography, Popular and Scientific, Or a Physical, Political, and Statistical Account of the World and Its Various Divisions, Band 3A. Fullarton and Company, 1832 |
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Seite 4
... house of peers the Scots should send 16 representatives ; and that the number of the Scottish members in the house of commons should be 45. That all the Scottish peers should be peers of Britain ; and that , except sitting in the house ...
... house of peers the Scots should send 16 representatives ; and that the number of the Scottish members in the house of commons should be 45. That all the Scottish peers should be peers of Britain ; and that , except sitting in the house ...
Seite 14
... House of Peers . ] The house of peers consists of the peers of England , 16 representatives of the peers of Scotland , and 32 representatives of the peers of Ireland . The peers cannot be arrested , except for crimes of the highest kind ...
... House of Peers . ] The house of peers consists of the peers of England , 16 representatives of the peers of Scotland , and 32 representatives of the peers of Ireland . The peers cannot be arrested , except for crimes of the highest kind ...
Seite 15
... house for any thing said within it . Not only their own persons , but those of their servants , are exempted from arrest , in civil causes , while on their journey to parliament , during their attendance there , and on their return from ...
... house for any thing said within it . Not only their own persons , but those of their servants , are exempted from arrest , in civil causes , while on their journey to parliament , during their attendance there , and on their return from ...
Seite 16
... house of lords as well as in the house of commons . When a bill has received the sanction of both houses , it remains in the house of lords for the royal assent , without which it cannot pass into a law . The royal assent may be given ...
... house of lords as well as in the house of commons . When a bill has received the sanction of both houses , it remains in the house of lords for the royal assent , without which it cannot pass into a law . The royal assent may be given ...
Seite 26
... houses of Lancaster and York , — effectually opposed the progress of arts , manufactures , and commerce . Nevertheless , some foreign merchants residing amongst us amassed great wealth . The commercial regulations of Henry VII ...
... houses of Lancaster and York , — effectually opposed the progress of arts , manufactures , and commerce . Nevertheless , some foreign merchants residing amongst us amassed great wealth . The commercial regulations of Henry VII ...
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
Abyssinia acres Africa Algiers amount ancient animal annually appears Arabs Ashantee banks Bornou bounded breadth Britain British Cairo called canal Cape cattle chief chiefly Christian church coast colony colour commerce considerable consists contains cotton crown cultivated Damietta desert district Dongola Egypt Egyptian England English Europe European exported extends feet fertile Fezzan France French Gambia grain height Henry hills houses inhabitants interior Ireland Irish island king kingdom labour lake land language latter length Loch Mahommedan Mandingoes manufactures miles Moors Morocco mountains nation natives nearly Negroes Niger Nile northern Nubia parliament Perthshire population port possession present prince principal province Ptolemy quantity reign remarkable river rocks Roman sand Scotish Scotland Senegal side Sierra Leone situated slaves soil southern species square miles supposed Timbuctoo tons town trade tribes Tripoli Upper Egypt vessels western whole
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 197 - They lived unknown, Till Persecution dragg'd them into fame, And chased them up to Heaven. Their ashes flew — No marble tells us whither. With their names No bard embalms and sanctifies his song : And history, so warm on meaner themes, Is cold on this.
Seite 444 - Bornou troops remained quite steady, without noise or confusion ; and a few horsemen, who were moving about in front giving directions, were the only persons out of the ranks. On the Arabs...
Seite 295 - And I will set the Egyptians against the Egyptians: And they shall fight every one against his brother, and every one against his neighbour; City against city, and kingdom against kingdom.
Seite 452 - Soudan, and the women the best spinners. The common imports are Goora nuts, brought from the borders of Ashantee ; and coarse calico and woollen cloth, in small quantities, with brass and pewter dishes, and some few spices from Nyffee. The Arabs, from Tripoli and Ghadamis, bring unwrought silk, otto of roses, spices, and beads : slaves are both exported and imported.
Seite 76 - In others, the pleasing vicissitudes of gently-rising hills and bending vales, fertile in com, waving with wood, and interspersed with meadows, offer the most delightful landscapes of rural opulence and beauty. Some tracts abound with prospects of the more romantic kind — lofty mountains, craggy rocks, deep, narrow dells, and tumbling torrents ; nor are there wanting, as a contrast to so many agreeable scenes, the gloomy features of black, barren moors and uncultivated heaths.
Seite 103 - ... injurious to the health. But as it approaches the metropolis it becomes loaded with a quantity of filth, which renders it disgusting to the senses, and improper to be employed in the preparation of food.
Seite 354 - It appeared to me like entering a city of giants, who, after a long conflict, were all destroyed, leaving the ruins of their various temples as the only proofs of their former existence.
Seite 460 - Bello; that one of the white men was a tall man with long hair; that they fought for three days before they were all killed ; that the people in the neighbourhood were very much alarmed, and great numbers fled to Nyffe and other countries, thinking that the Fellatas were certainly coming among them.
Seite 517 - ... rests quietly on the plain. At this time the whole dreary desert is transformed into one continued garden of flowers. The colonist, with his herds and his flocks, leaves the Snowy Mountains, and, descending into the plain, there finds a plentiful and wholesome supply of food for the animals ; while troops of the tall ostrich and the wandering antelope, driven also from the heights, share the repast, and enliven the scene. But how soon is the country again deprived of all its glory ! It scarcely...
Seite 295 - The austere life of the Essenians, their fasts and excommunications, the community of goods, the love of celibacy, their zeal for martyrdom, and the warmth though not the purity of their faith, already offered a very lively image of the primitive discipline.