The Pictorial Handbook of London Comprising Its Antiquities, Architecture, Arts ... and Scientific Institutions ...H.G. Bohn, 1854 - 910 sider |
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Side 1
... London , ancient and mo- dern . Architects : the great men , Jones , Wren , and Chambers , who have contributed most to the architecture of London . Arts , Manufactures , and Trades . Assurances . Asylums . Banks - Bank of England ...
... London , ancient and mo- dern . Architects : the great men , Jones , Wren , and Chambers , who have contributed most to the architecture of London . Arts , Manufactures , and Trades . Assurances . Asylums . Banks - Bank of England ...
Side 5
... London , in the modern sewers . On the east of London , a little below Blackwall , on the northern shore , the Lea falls into the Thames . This affluent rises in the hills of Hertfordshire , and flows through Puckeridge and Welwyn . At ...
... London , in the modern sewers . On the east of London , a little below Blackwall , on the northern shore , the Lea falls into the Thames . This affluent rises in the hills of Hertfordshire , and flows through Puckeridge and Welwyn . At ...
Side 7
... London Bridge and Richmond is 1 hour 18 minutes . The same resistances which retard the flow of the tidal wave affect the duration of its rise . Thus at London Bridge we find that the flood tide runs for 5 hours , and the ebb tide for 7 ...
... London Bridge and Richmond is 1 hour 18 minutes . The same resistances which retard the flow of the tidal wave affect the duration of its rise . Thus at London Bridge we find that the flood tide runs for 5 hours , and the ebb tide for 7 ...
Side 33
... London its composition changes very materially from what it is in the north - east of Kent , and its united thickness diminishes until it arrives at the extreme western outcrop . The greatest thickness in the portion first named is ...
... London its composition changes very materially from what it is in the north - east of Kent , and its united thickness diminishes until it arrives at the extreme western outcrop . The greatest thickness in the portion first named is ...
Side 34
... London clays are of a red colour , from the presence of ochreous iron , they are used for the manufacture of bricks . The elevations of the hills in the London clay of the basin of the Thames in no case exceed 620 ft . , which is that ...
... London clays are of a red colour , from the presence of ochreous iron , they are used for the manufacture of bricks . The elevations of the hills in the London clay of the basin of the Thames in no case exceed 620 ft . , which is that ...
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The Pictorial Handbook of London Comprising Its Antiquities, Architecture ... John Weale Ingen forhåndsvisning - 2015 |
Almindelige termer og sætninger
Almshouses annual apsis arches architect architecture Astronomer Astronomer Royal asylum Bank beautiful Bridge British building called Canal centre chapel Cheapside Church City of London collection common Company contains Court Covent Garden ditto Domenichino Duke east England English entrance erected establishment feet Gallery garden George Gothic Greenwich ground guineas Hall Hospital Inigo Jones institution instrument John King Landscape Lane length London London clay Lord lower makers manufacturers ment merchants metropolis museum nearly object observations observatory occupied ornamental P. P. Rubens Palace Park patients piers plants Portrait present prison Queen Regent's Park Rembrandt residence river Road Royal School side society Somerset House Southwark specimens Square stone Street style subscription Surrey telescope Thames tion Titian tower trees upper visitor walls Westminster whole Woolwich
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Side 578 - Engineer ; being the art of directing the great sources of power in nature for the use and convenience of man...
Side 790 - True, representing some principal pieces of the reign of Henry the Eighth, which was set forth with many extraordinary circumstances of pomp and majesty, even to the matting of the stage; the Knights of the Order with their Georges and Garters, the guards with their embroidered coats, and the like— sufficient in truth within a while to make greatness very familiar if not ridiculous.
Side 551 - Piscium, had exhausted the Society's finances to such an extent that the salaries even of its officers were in arrears. Accordingly, at the Council meeting of the 2nd of June, it was ordered that " Mr. Newton's book be printed, and that Mr. Halley undertake the business of looking after it, and printing it at his own charge, which he engaged to do.
Side 570 - British empire, a public institution for diffusing the knowledge and facilitating the general introduction of useful mechanical inventions and improvements, and for teaching, by courses of philosophical lectures and experiments, the application of science to the common purposes of life.
Side 549 - Sarum in proposing me a candidate ; and which, I hope, will be further conferred upon me by my election into the Society ; and if so, I shall endeavour to testify my gratitude, by communicating what my poor and solitary endeavours can effect towards the promoting your philosophical designs.
Side 114 - Hydrometer, and so in proportion for any greater or less Strength than the Strength of Proof, and for any greater or less Quantity than a Gallon ; viz.
Side 382 - ... arms' length, and showing them to the soldiers, to excite their compassion. The whole composition is full of animation, to which the air of the horses, thus pressed backwards, does not a little contribute. Both these sketches are admirably composed, and in every respect excellent ; few pictures of Rubens, even of his most finished .. works, give a higher idea of his genius.
Side 114 - Charter, not being sweetened Spirits, or Spirits so mixed as aforesaid, in regard to which the conditions of the Act 4 Viet. c. 8, have or shall have been fulfilled...
Side 594 - ... select from such correspondence all information which, according to the opinion of the society, may be likely to lead to practical benefit In the cultivation of the soil...
Side 89 - No person shall operate a motor vehicle on a public highway at a rate of speed greater than is reasonable and proper, having regard to the traffic and use of the highway, or so as to endanger the life or limb of any person, or the safety of any property...