... affixed to their belt so necessary an article of dress; the form of the pipes — from which the Dutch seem to have taken the model of theirs — so original; and, lastly, the preparation of the yellow leaves, which are merely rubbed to pieces and... The Monthly Magazine - Pàgina 381800Visualització completa - Sobre aquest llibre
 | James Finlay Weir Johnston - 1854 - 654 pàgines
...of the pipes, from which the Dutch seem to have taken the model of theirs, so original ; and lastly, the preparation of the yellow leaves, which are merely rubbed to pieces, and then put into the pipe, so peculiar, that they could not possibly derive all this from America by way of Europe, especially... | |
 | James Finlay Weir Johnston - 1855
...of the pipes, from which the Dutch seem to have taken the model of theirs, so original ; and lastly, the preparation of the yellow leaves, which are merely rubbed to pieces, and then put into the pipe, so peculiar, that they could not possibly dorive all this from America by way of Europe, especially... | |
 | Andrew Steinmetz - 1857 - 174 pàgines
...the pipes, from which the Dutch seem to have taken the model of theirs, so original ; and, lastly, the preparation of the yellow leaves, which are merely rubbed to pieces, and then put into the pipe, so peculiar, that they could not possibly derive all this from America by way of Europe, especially... | |
 | 1857
...taken the model of theirs, so original ; * ACM Exeter. Notes and Queries. Vol. II. p. 161. and lastly, the preparation of the yellow leaves, which are merely rubbed to pieces, and then put into the pipe, so peculiar, that they could not possibly derive all this from America by way of Europe, especially... | |
 | Sir Daniel Wilson - 1862
...of the pipes, from which the Dutch seem to have taken the model of theirs, so original; and, lastly, the preparation of the yellow leaves, which are merely rubbed to pieces, and then put into the pipe, so peculiar : that they could not possibly derive all tliis from America by way of Europe, especially... | |
 | 1864
...the Dutch seem to have taken the model of theirs, so original; and lastly, th« preparation of tho yellow leaves, which are merely rubbed to pieces, and then put into tho pipe, so peculiar, that they could not possibly derive all this from America by way of Europe,... | |
 | 1875
...the pipes, from which the Dutch seem to have taken the model of their's, so original ; and lastly, the preparation of the yellow leaves, which are merely rubbed to pieces and then put into the pipe, so peculiar ; that they could not possibly derive all this from America by way of Europe ; especially... | |
 | William Shepard Walsh, Henry Collins Walsh, William H. Garrison, Samuel R. Harris - 1891
...pipes — from which the Dutch seem to have taken the model of theirs — so original, and, lastly, the preparation of the yellow leaves, which are merely rubbed to pieces and then put into the pipes, so pecuculiar, that we cannot possibly derive all this from America, by way of Europe, especially... | |
 | 1891
...have taken the model of theirs — so original ; and, lastly, the preparation of the yellow leave*, which are merely rubbed to pieces, and then put into the pipe, so peculiar; that we cannot pissibly derive all this from America by way of Europe, especially as India,... | |
 | 1896
...from which the Dutch seem to have taken theirs, so original, and lastly, the preparation of the dried leaves, which are merely rubbed to pieces, and then put into the pipe, so peculiar, that they could not possibly have derived all this from America by way of Europe, especially... | |
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