| Johann Beckmann - 1814 - 698 pagina’s
...to the medical properties of indigo, I can, at any rate, show that the experiments made with it at the end of the seventeenth and the beginning of the eighteenth century fully confirm the high encomium bestowed by Dioscorides upon his indie a in. There was a time when... | |
| John Debell Tuckett - 1816 - 922 pagina’s
...Scotland was then in a most depressed state, Lord Kaimes observes, that the tenantry of Scotland, at the end of the seventeenth, and the beginning of the eighteenth century, were so oppressed with poverty, that the most able instructor in husbandry could not contribute to... | |
| Johann Beckmann - 1817 - 552 pagina’s
...to the medical properties of indigo, I can, at any rate, show that the experiments made with it at the end of the seventeenth and the beginning of the eighteenth century fully confirm the high encomium bestowed by Dioscorides upon his indicum. There was a time when the... | |
| Daniel Wilson - 1827 - 440 pagina’s
...the Cevennes Mountains, in the department of the Garde, remarkable as the retreat of the Protestants in the end of the seventeenth and the beginning of the eighteenth century, during the persecution of Louis XIV. Our host, when he had ended his own prayer, asked his new guest... | |
| 1828 - 706 pagina’s
...tongue; but the influence of the German language was too visible. This influence increased so much at the end of the seventeenth and the beginning of the eighteenth century, that Swedish poets, as Columbus and Lars Johnson, preferred to write their verses in that dialect.... | |
| 1828 - 710 pagina’s
...tongue ; but the influence of the German language was too visible. This influence increased so much at the end of the seventeenth and the beginning of the eighteenth century, that Swedish poets, as Columbus and Lars Johnson, preferred to write their verses in that dialect.... | |
| Robert Chambers - 1829 - 356 pagina’s
...appeared in 1724. The impulse which had been given to the public taste for Scottish song and music about the end of the seventeenth, and the beginning of the eighteenth century, was the proximate cause of this invaluable publi10 cation. The time had now gone past when the modulations... | |
| Robert Chambers - 1829 - 414 pagina’s
...appeared in 1724. The impulse which had been given to the public taste for Scottish song and music about the end of the seventeenth, and the beginning of the eighteenth century, was the proximate cause of this invaluable publication. The time had now gone past when the modulations... | |
| 1829 - 642 pagina’s
...MISCELLANY. " The impulse which had been given to the public taste tor Scottish song and music about the end of the seventeenth, and the beginning of the eighteenth century, was the proximate cause of this invaluable publication. The time had now gone past when the modulations... | |
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