Penny Cyclopaedia of the Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge, Volumes 19-20C. Knight, 1841 - Encyclopedias and dictionaries V.1-20 are, like missing vols. 21-26, also freely available online at the the China-America Digital Academic Library (CADAL), & can be accessed with the following individual urls: http://lookup.lib.hku.hk/lookup/bib/B3144507Xv1 Note: Click to view v.1 via CADAL. -- http://lookup.lib.hku.hk/lookup/bib/B3144507Xv2 Note: Click to view v.2 via CADAL http://lookup.lib.hku.hk/lookup/bib/B3144507Xv3 Note: Click to view v.3 via CADAL http://lookup.lib.hku.hk/lookup/bib/B3144507Xv4 Note: Click to view v.4 via CADAL. -- http://lookup.lib.hku.hk/lookup/bib/B3144507Xv5 Note: Click to view v.5 via CADAL. -- http://lookup.lib.hku.hk/lookup/bib/B3144507Xv6 Note: Click to view v.6 via CADAL. -- http://lookup.lib.hku.hk/lookup/bib/B3144507Xv7 Note: Click to view v.7 via CADAL. -- http://lookup.lib.hku.hk/lookup/bib/B3144507Xv8 Note: Click to view v.8 via CADAL. -- http://lookup.lib.hku.hk/lookup/bib/B3144507Xv9 Note: Click to view v.9 via CADAL. -- http://lookup.lib.hku.hk/lookup/bib/B3144507Xv10 Note: Click to view v.10 via CADAL. -- http://lookup.lib.hku.hk/lookup/bib/B3144507Xv11 Note: Click to view v.11 via CADAL. -- http://lookup.lib.hku.hk/lookup/bib/B3144507Xv12 Note: Click to view v.12 via CADAL. -- http://lookup.lib.hku.hk/lookup/bib/B3144507Xv13 Note: Click to view v.13 via CADAL. -- http://lookup.lib.hku.hk/lookup/bib/B3144507Xv14 Note: Click to view v.14 via CADAL. -- http://lookup.lib.hku.hk/lookup/bib/B3144507Xv15 Note: Click to view v.15 via CADAL. -- http://lookup.lib.hku.hk/lookup/bib/B3144507Xv16 Note: Click to view v.16 via CADAL. -- http://lookup.lib.hku.hk/lookup/bib/B3144507Xv17 Note: Click to view v.17 via CADAL. -- http://lookup.lib.hku.hk/lookup/bib/B3144507Xv18 Note: Click to view v.18 via CADAL. -- http://lookup.lib.hku.hk/lookup/bib/B3144507Xv19 Note: Click to view v.19 via CADAL. -- http://lookup.lib.hku.hk/lookup/bib/B3144507Xv20 Note: Click to view v.20 via CADAL. |
From inside the book
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Page 4
... considered the finest in America . Many cargoes are annually sent to Quebec and Halifax . The coast is so intersected by bays and creeks , that there is hardly a place which is more than eight miles from the shore . These bays and ...
... considered the finest in America . Many cargoes are annually sent to Quebec and Halifax . The coast is so intersected by bays and creeks , that there is hardly a place which is more than eight miles from the shore . These bays and ...
Page 12
... considered as attempting to smooth the details of the mathematical difficulties . It uses algebra freely , but is totally insufficient to show the use of the differential calculus as now known ; but it very fre- quently develops ...
... considered as attempting to smooth the details of the mathematical difficulties . It uses algebra freely , but is totally insufficient to show the use of the differential calculus as now known ; but it very fre- quently develops ...
Page 16
... considered as the three great organic revolutions by which block - printing was transformed into the art as it now exists . They are far , in- deed , from being upon a level in point of importance ; they descend in value in the order in ...
... considered as the three great organic revolutions by which block - printing was transformed into the art as it now exists . They are far , in- deed , from being upon a level in point of importance ; they descend in value in the order in ...
Page 30
... considered the probability of hypotheses as thing proposed contains , or has contained , a remarkable deduced from observed events . difficulty . Thus to this day we talk of the problem of three bodies , as being one the methods of ...
... considered the probability of hypotheses as thing proposed contains , or has contained , a remarkable deduced from observed events . difficulty . Thus to this day we talk of the problem of three bodies , as being one the methods of ...
Page 40
... considered are those in which the projecting lines are all straight , and either parallel to one another , as in the orthographic projection , or all passing through the same point , as in common perspective . But such a conception of ...
... considered are those in which the projecting lines are all straight , and either parallel to one another , as in the orthographic projection , or all passing through the same point , as in common perspective . But such a conception of ...
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Adour afterwards Allier animal antient appears belong bill birds Blainville body called centre character chiefly church colour common considerable consists contains court east edition Engines England English equal extends feet four France French Gave de Pau genera genus given Greek heat inches inhabitants island king known land latter length Locom mandible Maryborough means ment miles motion mountains nearly observed obtained Old Radnor parish passengers persons plants population Port portion Presteign principal printed probably produced proportion province Prussia Psittacidae Psittacus Pterodactylus Ptolemy publicani pyramid Pyrenees Pyrrhus quaestores quantity Radnorshire Ragusa rails railway ratio ravelin remarkable river road Roman Rome round says Scholium side species square square miles stone Strabo supposed surface temperature tion Toucan town upper valley velocity whole writers
Popular passages
Page 127 - Nature confessed some atonement to be necessary : the gospel discovers that the necessary atonement is made." 2. When several semicolons have preceded, and a still greater pause is necessary, in order to mark the connecting or concluding sentiment: as, " A divine legislator, uttering his voice from heaven ; an almighty governor, stretching forth his arm to punish or reward ; informing us of perpetual rest prepared hereafter for the righteous, and of indignation and wrath awaiting the wicked : these...
Page 48 - And the Lord said unto Moses, See, I have, made thee a god to Pharaoh : and Aaron thy brother shall be thy prophet.
Page 6 - The third I now design to suppress. Philosophy is such an impertinently litigious lady, that a man had as good be engaged in lawsuits, as have to do with her.
Page 126 - I shall here define it to be a conceit arising from the use of two words that agree in the sound, but differ in the sense. The only way therefore to try a piece of wit, is to translate it into a different language. If it bears the test, you may pronounce it true ; but if it vanishes in the experiment, you may conclude it to have been a pun.
Page 278 - World, implying a second and third volume, which I also intended, and have hewn out ; besides many other discouragements persuading my silence, it hath pleased God to take that glorious prince out of the world to whom they were directed...
Page 126 - I went to one of the windows which opened to the area below, where all the several voices lost their distinction, and rose up in a confused humming; which created in me a reflection that could not come into the mind of any but of one a little too studious; for I said to myself, with a kind of pun in thought, What nonsense is all the hurry of this world to those who are above, it?
Page 224 - Actius, who lived at the end of the fifth and the beginning of the sixth centuries, repeats the recommendations of Oribasius.
Page 192 - WORSHIP. ALL true and acceptable worship to God is offered in the inward and immediate moving and drawing of his own Spirit, which is neither limited to places, times, or persons...
Page 46 - Also purchase is called the possession of lands or tenements that a man hath by his deed or agreement, unto which possession he cometh not by title of descent from any of his ancestors or of his cousins, but by his own deed.
Page 24 - Table hath of late times assumed unto itself a power to intermeddle in civil causes and matters only of private interest between party and party, and have adventured to determine of the estates and liberties of the subject contrary to the law of the land and the rights and privileges of the subject...