| Samuel Bulfinch Emmons - 1857 - 302 str.
...had never heard of such a phenomenon, they were extremely alarmed with the apprehension of the final judgment. All amusements, all business, and even sleep...interrupted, for want of a little knowledge of history." We were told by some of the advent preachers that meteors and shooting stars, falling to the earth,... | |
| Noah Webster - 1815 - 228 str.
...such a phenomenon, they were extremely alarmed- with the apprehension ol the approach of the final judgment. All amusements, all business, and even sleep...when they again disappeared, for ten or twelve years. among cattle and horses. AVvt 522 Diseases among the Brutes.. The brutes have attimes pestilential... | |
| Noah Webster - 1823 - 384 str.
...phenomenon, they were extremely alarmed with the apprehension of the approach of the final judgement. All amusements, all business, and even sleep was interrupted,...when they again disappeared, for ten or twelve years* The brutes have at times pestilential diseases which sweep them away in multitudes. A plague among... | |
| John Warner Barber - 1828 - 280 str.
...such a phenomenon, they were extremely alarmed, with the apprehension of the approach of the final judgment. All amusements, all business, and even sleep...for want of a little knowledge of history. From 1719 •• Coll. Hist. Soc. I. 95-98. f Philosophical Trans. No. 423. to 1790, these lights were frequent,... | |
| Noah Webster - 1832 - 378 str.
...such a phenomenon, they were extremely alarmed, with the apprehension of the approach of the final judgment. All amusements, all business, and even sleep...lights were frequent, when they again disappeared, for a long period. 421. Diseases among the Brutes. The brutes have at times pestilential diseases which... | |
| John Warner Barber - 1841 - 590 str.
...had never heard of such a phenomenon, they were extremely alarmed with the apprehension of the final judgment. All amusements, all business, and even sleep...interrupted, for want of a little knowledge of history." The following relative to the first appearance of the Aurora is extracted from a letter published in... | |
| William Cothren - 1854 - 878 str.
...had never heard of such a phenomenon, they were extremely alarmed with the apprehension of the final judgment. All amusements, all business and even sleep...interrupted, for want of a little knowledge of history." The more superstitious in Woodbury, as in other places, were greatly alarmed at this new manifestation... | |
| John Warner Barber - 1856 - 514 str.
...of such a phenomenon, they were extremely alarmed with the apprehension of the approach of the final judgment. All amusements, all business, and even sleep,...when they again disappeared for ten or twelve years.* A beautiful phenomenon (connected as it is supposed with the Boreal Lights) was seen in the northern... | |
| John Warner Barber - 1856 - 636 str.
...had never heard of such a phenomenon, they were extremely alarmed with the apprehension of the final judgment. All amusements, all business, and even sleep...interrupted, for want of a little knowledge of history." The following relative to the first appearance of the Aurora is extracted from a letter published in... | |
| John Warner Barber - 1856 - 644 str.
...had never heard of such a phenomenon, they were extremely alarmed with the apprehension of the final judgment. All amusements, all business, and even sleep...interrupted, for want of a little knowledge of history." The following relative to the first appearance of the Aurora is extracted from a letter published in... | |
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