North-American Review and Miscellaneous JournalUniversity of Northern Iowa, 1832 |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 52
Page 401
... forests offer us treas- ures , such as few lands can rival and none can possibly exceed . We are told that in the United States there are one hundred and forty species of forest trees of the larger size , while in France there are but ...
... forests offer us treas- ures , such as few lands can rival and none can possibly exceed . We are told that in the United States there are one hundred and forty species of forest trees of the larger size , while in France there are but ...
Page 416
... forests have perished , and left a wilder- ness where they stood . The earth needs them to shelter it from the extremes of cold and heat , to maintain and treasure the moisture , and to produce certain changes in the air ; and wherever ...
... forests have perished , and left a wilder- ness where they stood . The earth needs them to shelter it from the extremes of cold and heat , to maintain and treasure the moisture , and to produce certain changes in the air ; and wherever ...
Page 428
... forests will afford the planter every thing he can de- sire ; and by contrasting the light glancing ripple of the aspen leaves with the dark and steady calm of the evergreen , or the deep glossy oak - leaf with the silken pine ; by ...
... forests will afford the planter every thing he can de- sire ; and by contrasting the light glancing ripple of the aspen leaves with the dark and steady calm of the evergreen , or the deep glossy oak - leaf with the silken pine ; by ...
Contents
COUSINS PHILOSOPHY | 19 |
LIFE AND TIMES OF RICHARD BAXTER | 36 |
HODGSONS MEMOIRS ON THE BERBER LANGUAGE | 54 |
12 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
admitted African American amount ancient appears Bank beautiful Berber Berber language Boston called capital character Cholera circumstances Colony constitution cotton course Crocker & Brewster cultivation dialect disease domestic manufactures emigrants employed England equal establishment existence fact favor feeling foreign forests Genoese dialect give Government human hundred important inhabitants insects interest island Italian Italian language Kabyle Kentucky l'humanité labor land language less letter Liberia manner manumitted memorialists ment mind moral mountains native nature Niger object observed Odin opinion Pantellaria passed peculiar persons philosophy political population possession present principle produced protecting duties protecting policy purpose readers reason regard remarkable residence respect river Romanesco says Sir James Mackintosh Skalds slavery slaves Society soil Spain spirit supply supposed thing tion town trees truth Tuggurt United Virginia whole words writers XXXV.-No