A View of Nature, in Letters to a Traveller Among the Alps: With Reflections on Atheistical Philosophy, Now Exemplified in France, Том 2T. Becket, 1794 |
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Стр. iii
... Mont Blanc the highest mountain in the world --- Different states of the atmosphere at different heights of moun- tains --- Their atmospherical phænomena owing , in great part , to electricity --- Nature and properties of the electrical ...
... Mont Blanc the highest mountain in the world --- Different states of the atmosphere at different heights of moun- tains --- Their atmospherical phænomena owing , in great part , to electricity --- Nature and properties of the electrical ...
Стр. 16
... Mont Blanc , we now know , exceeds Teneriffe , and not only Mont Blanc , but many other of the Alps of Savoy and Swit- zerland . Mont Blanc , as an integral elevation , and independent of any measurement from the level of the sea ...
... Mont Blanc , we now know , exceeds Teneriffe , and not only Mont Blanc , but many other of the Alps of Savoy and Swit- zerland . Mont Blanc , as an integral elevation , and independent of any measurement from the level of the sea ...
Стр. 17
... Mont Blanc is 15,562 feet , or thereabouts , which makes it higher by 808 feet , than Vesuvius and Etna , like Pelion and Ossa piled one upon the other . Notwithstanding this superior elevation of the soil , though not of the mountains ...
... Mont Blanc is 15,562 feet , or thereabouts , which makes it higher by 808 feet , than Vesuvius and Etna , like Pelion and Ossa piled one upon the other . Notwithstanding this superior elevation of the soil , though not of the mountains ...
Стр. 18
... Mont Blanc . The mountains lose their heads in the clouds , and are almost all covered with enor- mous masses of snow , as old as the summits on which they are spread . The valley in which Quito has been built , exceeds considerably the ...
... Mont Blanc . The mountains lose their heads in the clouds , and are almost all covered with enor- mous masses of snow , as old as the summits on which they are spread . The valley in which Quito has been built , exceeds considerably the ...
Стр. 67
... Mont Blanc , how glorious the philosopher ap- pears , who attempts , and at length compasses its hoary top . To men of such indefatigable in- dustry E 2 dustry , how much are we indebted ? The sages LETTER XXXV . 67.
... Mont Blanc , how glorious the philosopher ap- pears , who attempts , and at length compasses its hoary top . To men of such indefatigable in- dustry E 2 dustry , how much are we indebted ? The sages LETTER XXXV . 67.
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Adam æther ages Alps ancient animal antediluvian antiquity appears astronomy atmosphere attraction basaltes believe bitumen bitumen of Judea bodies bowels Burnet calcareous called cause coal common conceive conjecture consequently continued creation crystals degree deluge dephlogisticated divine earth earthquakes Egyptians electric fluid eruptions Esdras eternal existence explosion feet fossil Giant's Causeway globe granite Greeks heat heavens hence human imagine inflammable inhabitants instance iron island Israelites land lava less light likewise magnetic mankind manner mass matter metal miles mineral Mont Blanc Moses motion mountains nature observed occasioned ocean opinion origin petrifications phænomena philosophers phlogiston planets poles present principles probably prodigious produced pyrites quantity reason rock says Scripture Scythians serpent shew Sir William Hamilton solid spirit stances stones strata substances supposed surface tains thing tion Toadstone tricity truth ture universal vapour vegetables Vesuvius volcanos whole
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Стр. 293 - And God said unto Noah. The end of all flesh is come before me; for the earth is filled with violence through them; and, behold, I will destroy them with the earth.
Стр. 258 - And God made the firmament, and divided the waters, which were under the firmament from the waters, which were above the firmament: and it was so.
Стр. 282 - And the Lord said unto Moses, Make thee a fiery serpent, and set it upon a pole: and it shall come to pass, that every one that is bitten, when he looketh upon it, shall live.
Стр. 286 - He removed the high places, and brake the images, and cut down the groves, and brake in pieces the brazen serpent that Moses had made: for unto those days the children of Israel did burn incense to it: and he called it Nehushtan.
Стр. 117 - The heat of the metal of the first gun drove so much damp into the mould of the second, which was near it, that as soon as the metal was let into it, it blew up with the greatest violence, tearing up the ground some feet deep, breaking down the furnace, untiling the house, killing many spectators on the spot, with the streams of melted metal, and scalding many others in a most miserable manner.
Стр. 72 - So it is in contemplation ; if a man will begin with certainties, he shall end in doubts ; but if he will be content to begin with doubts, he shall end in certainties.
Стр. 338 - Sea; this huge mass of stone is softened and dissolved as a tender cloud into rain. Here stood the African mountains, and Atlas with his top above the clouds: there was frozen Caucasus, and Taurus, and Imaus, and the mountains of Asia ; and yonder, towards the north, stood the Riphaean hills, clothed in ice and snow.
Стр. 399 - Thousands of thousands of suns, multiplied without end, and ranged all around us, at immense distances from each other, attended by ten thousand times ten thousand worlds, all in rapid motion, yet calm, regular, and harmonious, invariably keeping the paths prescribed them ; and these worlds peopled with myriads of intelligent beings, formed for endless progression in perfection and felicity.
Стр. 247 - That great chain of causes, which, linking one to another, even to the throne of God himself, can never be unravelled by any industry of ours.
Стр. 411 - And are not the sun and fixed stars great earths vehemently hot, whose heat is conserved by the greatness of the bodies and the mutual action and reaction between them, and 'the light which they emit; and whose parts are kept from fuming away, not only by their fixity, but also by the vast weight and density of the atmospheres incumbent upon them and very strongly compressing them, and condensing the vapors and exhalations which arise from them?