Memoir and Correspondence of the Late Sir James Edward Smith, Volume 2Longman, Rees, Orne Brown, Green and Longman, 1832 |
De dentro do livro
Resultados 1-5 de 41
Página 77
... practical agriculture and the promotion of this use- ful knowledge , together with our Poor Institute , take up all my leisure . I shall certainly revisit En- gland as soon as Europe shall be restored to peace . You know , my dear Sir ...
... practical agriculture and the promotion of this use- ful knowledge , together with our Poor Institute , take up all my leisure . I shall certainly revisit En- gland as soon as Europe shall be restored to peace . You know , my dear Sir ...
Página 237
... practical knowledge than any person I have ever known . We are con- stant companions , and make excursions into the mountains occasionally . I have been able to assist him in the Lichens , so that now he has become well acquainted with ...
... practical knowledge than any person I have ever known . We are con- stant companions , and make excursions into the mountains occasionally . I have been able to assist him in the Lichens , so that now he has become well acquainted with ...
Página 281
... practical botanist . The generic characters founded on the general and partial involucra I have ever found most difficult to profit by , or use in de- termining with certainty the groups of this natural and numerous order of plants ...
... practical botanist . The generic characters founded on the general and partial involucra I have ever found most difficult to profit by , or use in de- termining with certainty the groups of this natural and numerous order of plants ...
Página 302
... ? ) Wales , the Mersey , & c . I felt as if I were with Lorenzo de ' Medici at his villa ; for of all the men I ever knew , Mr. Roscoe most surpasses my expectations . " a practical botanist . His library is rich in botany 302.
... ? ) Wales , the Mersey , & c . I felt as if I were with Lorenzo de ' Medici at his villa ; for of all the men I ever knew , Mr. Roscoe most surpasses my expectations . " a practical botanist . His library is rich in botany 302.
Página 303
James Edward Smith lady Pleasance Reeve Smith. a practical botanist . His library is rich in botany , and especially in Italian history and poetry . I fancy myself at Lorenzo's own villa . I expect my friend Caldwell from Dublin every ...
James Edward Smith lady Pleasance Reeve Smith. a practical botanist . His library is rich in botany , and especially in Italian history and poetry . I fancy myself at Lorenzo's own villa . I expect my friend Caldwell from Dublin every ...
Outras edições - Ver todos
Memoir and Correspondence of the Late Sir James Edward Smith, Volume 2 James Edward Smith Visualização completa - 1832 |
Memoir and Correspondence of the Late Sir James Edward Smith, Volume 2 James Edward Smith Visualização completa - 1832 |
Termos e frases comuns
acquainted affectionate affinity anthers appears beautiful believe Bernard de Jussieu botanist CALDWELL called calyx capsule character corolla cotyledons Davall Dawson Turner dear Friend dear Sir delightful dicotyledonous distinct Dublin England English Botany excellent favour feel Flora florets flowers French fructification fruit garden genera genus germen Giseke give happy herbarium honour hope ideas JAMES EDWARD SMITH Jussieu kind labours Lady Smith late learned leaves lectures less letter Linnæan Society Linnæus London Lord mentioned mind monocotyledonous mountains næus natural order Nelumbo never Norwich Nymphæa obliged observed perfect perhaps petals pistils Plantarum plants pleasure Port Patrick present principles racter respect roots Roscoe Roscoea scarcely seeds sent sincerely Sir J. E. Smith Sir James spatha species specimens stamens stem stipulas strobilus taste thing tion Tournefort tribe umbel wish write
Passagens mais conhecidas
Página 179 - He rules with wide and absolute command O'er the broad ocean and the steadfast land : Jehovah reigns, unbounded, and alone, And all creation hangs beneath his throne : He reigns alone ; let no inferior nature Usurp, or share the throne of the Creator. He saw the struggling beams of infant light Shoot through the massy gloom of ancient night ; His spirit hushed the...
Página 378 - Tis sweeter far to me, To walk together to the kirk With a goodly company! — To walk together to the kirk, And all together pray, While each to his great Father bends, Old men, and babes, and loving friends And youths and maidens gay!
Página 399 - I ; be not afraid." 2 So when in silence nature sleeps, And his lone watch the mourner keeps, One thought shall every pang remove ; Trust, feeble man, thy Maker's love. 3 Blest be the voice that breathes from heaven To every heart in sunder riven, When love, and joy, and hope, are fled, —
Página 377 - In matters of eternal concern, the authority of the highest human opinions has no claim to be admitted, as a ground of belief, but it may with the strictest propriety be opposed to that of men of inferior learning and penetration ; and, whilst the pious derive satisfaction from the perusal of sentiments according with their own, those who doubt or disbelieve, should be induced to weigh with candour and impartiality, arguments which have produced conviction in the minds of the best, the wisest, and...
Página 399 - God calms the tumult and the storm ; He rules the seraph and the worm : No creature is by him forgot Of those who know, or know him not. 4 And when the last dread hour shall come, While shuddering nature waits her doom, This voice shall wake the pious dead,
Página 396 - ... a glimpse of the immediate agency of the Deity, it is in the contemplation of this vital principle, which seems independent of material organization, and an impulse of his own divine energy.
Página 379 - To give our views of God, in one word, we believe in his Parental character. We ascribe to him, not only the name, but the dispositions and principles of a father. We believe that he has a father's concern for his creatures, a father's desire for their improvement, a father's equity in proportioning his commands to their powers, a father's joy in their progress, a father's readiness to receive the penitent, and a father's justice for the incorrigible.
Página 110 - I rejoice you have met with Froissart, he is the Herodotus of a barbarous age; had he but had the luck of writing in as good a 10 language, he might have been immortal. His locomotive disposition (for then there was no other way of learning things), his simple curiosity, his religious credulity, were much like those of the old Grecian.
Página 480 - The weighty bullion of one sterling line Drawn to French wire would through whole pages shine.
Página 440 - Virginia at the end of the seventeenth century and the beginning of the eighteenth.