| 1845 - 440 str.
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| 1831 - 336 str.
...without satiety or distaste. They may be enjoyed, too, in the intervals of the most active business ; and the calm and dispassionate interest with which they...man of business finds himself continually involved. There is something in the contemplation of general laws which powerfully persuades us to merge individual... | |
| 1831 - 336 str.
...without satiety or distaste. They may be enjoyed, too, in the intervals of the most active business; and the calm and dispassionate interest with which they...man of business finds himself continually involved. There is something in the contemplation of general laws which powerfully persuades us to merge individual... | |
| Baden Powell - 1834 - 390 str.
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| 1837 - 538 str.
...satiety and distaste. They may be enjoyed, too, in the intervals of the most active business ; and the calm and dispassionate interest with which they...man of business finds himself continually involved. SIR JOHN HERSCHEL. MARRIAGE CEREMONIES AMONG THE HINDOOS. MARRIAGE is considered, among the Hindoos,... | |
| 1837 - 868 str.
...that they are independent of external circumstances, and may be enjoyed in every situation of life ; the calm and dispassionate interest with which they...and from the conflict of passions, prejudices, and * ID aid of the funds of the new Association for the Fishermen of Brighton. interests in which we all... | |
| Herbert Mayo - 1838 - 360 str.
...dispassionate interest with which they fill the mind renders them a most delightful retreat from the agitation and dissensions of the world, and from the conflict...man of business finds himself continually involved. There is something in the contemplation of general laws which powerfully persuades us to merge individual... | |
| 536 str.
...without satietyand distaste. They may be enjoyed too in the intervals of the most active business; and the calm and dispassionate interest with which they...man of business finds himself continually involved. — SIR JOHN HERSCHEL. THE SIPHON. To understand the action of the siphon, or the mode by which it... | |
| John Frederick William Herschel - 1851 - 484 str.
...without satiety or distaste. They may be enjoyed, too, in the intervals of the most active business ; and the calm and dispassionate interest with which they...interests in which the man of business finds himself involved. There is something in the contemplation of general laws which powerfully induces and persuades... | |
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