Descriptive Essays Contributed to the Quarterly Review: Cornish miners in AmericaJ. Murray, 1857 - 384 pàgines |
Des de l'interior del llibre
Resultats 1 - 5 de 46.
Pàgina 2
... mile in length by half a mile in breadth , covered with what are termed ' the deads ' of the mine ; i . e . slaty poisonous rubbish , thrown up in rugged heaps , which , at a distance , give the place the appearance of an encampment of ...
... mile in length by half a mile in breadth , covered with what are termed ' the deads ' of the mine ; i . e . slaty poisonous rubbish , thrown up in rugged heaps , which , at a distance , give the place the appearance of an encampment of ...
Pàgina 16
... miles to go ere he can fill his cask . As soon as the young men have supped , they generally dress themselves in their holiday clothes , -a suit better than the working clothes , in which they walk to the mines , but not so good as ...
... miles to go ere he can fill his cask . As soon as the young men have supped , they generally dress themselves in their holiday clothes , -a suit better than the working clothes , in which they walk to the mines , but not so good as ...
Pàgina 18
... miles in breadth ; nevertheless we have streams of much narrower dimensions , free from the rapids of the St. Law- rence , from the pamperos and sandbanks of the Rio Plata , and broad enough for every purpose for which we can require ...
... miles in breadth ; nevertheless we have streams of much narrower dimensions , free from the rapids of the St. Law- rence , from the pamperos and sandbanks of the Rio Plata , and broad enough for every purpose for which we can require ...
Pàgina 37
... miles from each other ; and , while the natives were smiling at the Cornish tinners , who were standing on the sunny sides of the streets , devoured by mosquitoes , and cutting water - melons the wrong way — the Govern- ments began to ...
... miles from each other ; and , while the natives were smiling at the Cornish tinners , who were standing on the sunny sides of the streets , devoured by mosquitoes , and cutting water - melons the wrong way — the Govern- ments began to ...
Pàgina 47
... miles from the town , is a splendid mansion , which Mr. Robins would designate as " delight- fully situate , " and fit for the residence of a " county mem- ber " or 66 NOBLEMAN OF RANK . " Modestly retired from the road , it yet proudly ...
... miles from the town , is a splendid mansion , which Mr. Robins would designate as " delight- fully situate , " and fit for the residence of a " county mem- ber " or 66 NOBLEMAN OF RANK . " Modestly retired from the road , it yet proudly ...
Altres edicions - Mostra-ho tot
Descriptive Essays Contributed to the Quarterly Review: Cornish miners in ... Sir Francis Bond Head Visualització completa - 1857 |
Descriptive Essays Contributed to the Quarterly Review: Cornish miners in ... Sir Francis Bond Head Visualització completa - 1857 |
Descriptive Essays Contributed to the Quarterly Review: Cornish miners in ... Sir Francis Bond Head Visualització completa - 1857 |
Frases i termes més freqüents
accordingly Act of Parliament America appear Assistant Commissioner attention better British character Colonies colour Companies compositors conceive considerable Cornish miners Cornwall declared dress Durham duty East Kent endeavour engine England English peasant evident exist expense extract feel feet Foundling Hospital Francis Head globe Government hand horses hour House House of Lords hundred immense Imperial Parliament independent labourer Indian inhabitants instance labourer land Legislature live lode London Lord Durham's Lordship Lower Canada Majesty's Majesty's Government ment miles mind mines nation nature never observed opinion overseer parish passed pauper Poldice poor Poor-Law Amendment Act poorhouse possess power of steam printing Province railroad railway ratepayer readers received reflect Report respect scarcely seen smock-frocks steamers suddenly tion travelling tribes Unions Upper Canada vessel Waterloo Bridge whole wigwam workhouse young
Passatges populars
Pàgina 223 - of the danger to which its tranquillity would be exposed by their presence. . . . " If the peace of Lower Canada is to be again menaced, it is necessary that its Government should be able to reckon on a more cordial and vigorous support at home than has been accorded to me." Not satisfied with this appeal to the people of the British North
Pàgina 328 - or other connect their origin with " a big canoe," which was supposed to have rested on the summit of some hill or mountain in their neighbourhood. The Mandan Indians carry this vague Mount Ararat impression to a very remarkable extent] for Mr. Catlin found established among them
Pàgina 5 - so on to any depth. The object of these perpendicular shafts, and horizontal galleries, is not so much to get at the ores which are directly procured from them, as to put the lode into a state capable of being worked by a number of men,—in short, to convert it into what may now be termed a mine ; for
Pàgina 344 - in the idea of the inhabitants even of a solitary wigwam being suddenly attacked by an invisible, malignant agency from the Old World which, almost on the selfsame day, has rendered them all incapable of providing for each other, or even for themselves ; and it is dreadful to consider in how many instances, by the simultaneous
Pàgina 320 - to the fairer sex, the following anecdote related by Captain Bell and Major Long, of the United States' Army, and certified by Major O'Fallan the American agent, as also by his interpreter who witnessed it. A few years ago a young Pawnee warrior, son of ' Old Knife,' knowing that his tribe, according to their custom, were
Pàgina 330 - Q. What ceremonies have you at the burial of your dead ? —A. These vary. We bury by putting the body under ground in a case, or wrapped in skins ; sometimes by placing it in trees, or standing it erect and enclosing it with a paling. This difference arises generally from the request of
Pàgina 11 - sieve under water, by which means the ore, or heavy part, keeps at the bottom, while the spar, or refuse, is scraped from the top, The part which passes through the sieve is also stirred about in water, the lighter portion is
Pàgina 2 - of seven hundred and fifty-seven feet, is full of novelty. Over a surface neither mountainous nor flat, but diversified from sea to sea by a constant series of low undulating hills and vales, the farmer and the miner seem to be
Pàgina 5 - them; from these the ores and materials may also be raised; and it is evident that, by thus sinking perpendicular shafts a hundred yards from each other, the first gallery, or level, may be prolonged ad libitum. But while this horizontal work
Pàgina 328 - and accordingly the young modest Indian girl, with her arms folded across her bosom, as fervently entreats the Fiend " to lead her not into temptation," as her parents, under every affliction, pray to the Great Spirit "to deliver them from evil." The various nations have different notions of the origin of their race ; it is nevertheless an extraordinary fact, vouched