The Bee: Or Literary Weekly Intelligencer, Bind 17James Anderson Mundell and Son, 1793 |
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Side 6
... appearance : that it throve on a great diversity of soils , and in a variety of exposures , even in very cold climates : that it bore seeds early , which germinated freely , and was easily propagated : that the verdure of its leaves was ...
... appearance : that it throve on a great diversity of soils , and in a variety of exposures , even in very cold climates : that it bore seeds early , which germinated freely , and was easily propagated : that the verdure of its leaves was ...
Side 14
... appearance of a live hedge . In rich grounds abundant orchards might thus be obtained , and the waste occasioned by their roots be plentifully repaidby the fruit . The only other use that can be pleaded for live hedges is for af ...
... appearance of a live hedge . In rich grounds abundant orchards might thus be obtained , and the waste occasioned by their roots be plentifully repaidby the fruit . The only other use that can be pleaded for live hedges is for af ...
Side 15
... appearance , and is upon the whole a fence which has every thing that could be desired , were it suffici- ently durable . Were it made of larix , that quali- ty would be obtained , so that it would be quite complete . Those who live in ...
... appearance , and is upon the whole a fence which has every thing that could be desired , were it suffici- ently durable . Were it made of larix , that quali- ty would be obtained , so that it would be quite complete . Those who live in ...
Side 51
... appearance which would not a little astonish the vulgar , and pofsibly transfer the story of the golden fleece from Colchis Athol . to Dr Pallas on reading over the rough copy of this paper , made the following note at the bottom of ...
... appearance which would not a little astonish the vulgar , and pofsibly transfer the story of the golden fleece from Colchis Athol . to Dr Pallas on reading over the rough copy of this paper , made the following note at the bottom of ...
Side 84
... appearance " fills us with respect and friendship ; and we are ra- " vished with the number of your brilliant accom- " plishments . " The Czarowitz recollecting the words of Felitsa , replied , I have not the honour to know you , and ...
... appearance " fills us with respect and friendship ; and we are ra- " vished with the number of your brilliant accom- " plishments . " The Czarowitz recollecting the words of Felitsa , replied , I have not the honour to know you , and ...
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afsist animals appearance army barrel beef or pork borax Botany Bay breed Brest Britain Britiſh carried circumstances colour COURT OF SESSION curing beef Czarowitz daugh duty Editor enemy Engliſh Epicurus equal establiſhed Europe expence exportation farther favour fhall fheep fhips fhort fhould fhow France French gallons give hand happineſs heart hope impofsible improvement inhabitants Ivan kind labours larch larch wood late lefs lord Lord Hood Louis XVII majesty manner Marie Antoinette means ment mind mode nation nature necefsary never object paria person Peter plants pleasure pofsefsion pofsible poſseſsion present preserve Prince Prince Waldeck produce progrefs purpose render respect Rufsian Ruſsia Scotland seeds ſhall ſhe ſheep ſhort ſhow society soon soul species thee ther thing thou tion Toulon tranquillity tree varieties Vildac whole wool XVII
Populære passager
Side 178 - The insect youth are on the wing, Eager to taste the honied spring And float amid the liquid noon ; Some lightly o'er the current skim, Some show their gaily-gilded trim Quick-glancing to the sun.
Side 178 - To Contemplation's sober eye Such is the race of Man : And they that creep, and they that fly Shall end where they began. Alike the busy and the gay But flutter thro' life's little day, In Fortune's varying colours drest: Brush'd by the hand of rough Mischance.
Side 323 - The ploughman inly smiles to see upturn His mellow glebe, best pledge of future crop : With glee the gardener eyes his smoking beds : E'en pining sickness feels a short relief. The happy schoolboy brings transported forth His...
Side 165 - In seventy or eighty years a man may have a deep gust of the world, know what it is, what it can afford, and what 'tis to have been a man.
Side 26 - Philadelphia; by trade a printer ; and a bachelor ; I have some relations at" Boston, to whom I am going to make a visit: my stay will be short, and I shall then return and follow my business, as a prudent man ought to do. This is all I know of myself, and all I can possibly inform you of; I beg, therefore, that you will have pity upon me and my horse, and give us both some refreshment.
Side 116 - ... to whom he secretly gave a signal, so as to let him .know the individuals he wanted, to the number often or twenty out of a flock of some hundreds.
Side 171 - Potherbs here and there he found: Which cultivated with his daily Care, And bruis'd with Vervain, were his frugal Fare. Sometimes white...
Side vii - Nation will furnish speedily a force sufficient to assist in repelling the attacks with which they are at this moment threatened by the army of Italy, which marches towards Toulon, and by that of General Carteau, who directs his forces against Marseilles. VI. That the people of Toulon...
Side 116 - ... out of a flock of some hundreds ; he then went away, and from a distance of several miles, sent back the dog by himself in the night time, who picked out the individual sheep that had been pointed out to him, separated them from the flock, and drove them before him...
Side 190 - Where, notwithstanding the difference of religion, Such extraordinary honours were paid to his memory, As had never graced that of any other British subject, Since the death of Sir Philip Sydney.