| Charles Burney - 1773 - 440 halaman
...flower of this capital, poured into the grand avenue ; Mis vomit JEdibuf undam ; and formed an aflembly not to be met with in any other part of the world. changed throughout the reft of Europe; yet the French, commonly accufed of more levity and caprice... | |
| 1790 - 926 halaman
...turf alfo, on which we tread, abounds with aromatic plants, geraniums, &c. natives of this fpot, and which are not to be met with in any other part of the kingdom ; they here grow fpontaneoufly, and, the air being perfumed with their refrefhing fragrance,... | |
| Giuseppe Acerbi - 1802 - 412 halaman
...circumftances, and reprefented this place to our imagination as fomething fmgular and extraordinary, which was not to be met with in any other part of the world. Even the very thought of having reached the Frozen Ocean had fomething fublime in it : to enjoy it... | |
| William Cobbett - 1834 - 894 halaman
...enforcing any public pro vision for the poor. For deciding this question, Scotlani offers facilities which are not to be met with in any other part of (he Unitec Kingdom. In England and Wales no parish is without poor-laws ; in Irelunc no parish is with... | |
| John Buffa (M.D.) - 1810 - 280 halaman
...are totally unmolested in their traffic; in short, there are great privileges attached to this town, which are not to be met with in any other part of Barf bary. The lower town is almost entirely surrounded by hills, which are highly cultivated, and... | |
| John Dubourdieu - 1812 - 428 halaman
...nature has been pleased to scatter over our county, with greater profusion, and greater variety, than is to be met with in any other part of the world. In the Philosophical Transactions, for the year 1808, I have given a minute account of the arrangement of... | |
| Wakefield, Edward - 1812 - 954 halaman
...which they are treated by the people in other provinces. I had au opportunity of observing many scenes are not to be met with in any other part of the British empire, and which make a singular impression on a stranger. When the bishop of Kilmore entered... | |
| R. P. Forster - 1818 - 592 halaman
...circumstances, and represented this place to our imagination as something singular and extraordinary, which was not to be met with in any other part of the world.' Determined to visit the North Cape, which was one hundred miles distant, our travellers engaged a boat... | |
| Pierce Egan - 1819 - 398 halaman
...It is worthy of observation, that the turf abounds with aromatic plants, which grow here wildly, and are not to be met with in any other part of the kingdom, being natives of this peculiar spot. The fragrance from these plants proves of the most vivifying... | |
| Mrs. Sherwood (Mary Martha) - 1828 - 284 halaman
...Humiliation, whose gloomy appearance alarms many a traveller who afterwards find consolations therein which are not to be met with in any other part of their pilgrimage. And now, although I was heartily vexed, yet I could not but smile to observe the... | |
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