The Quarterly Review, Volume 120John Murray, 1866 |
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Results 6-10 of 45
Page 76
... feet eight inches long , and four and five- eighths inches broad throughout its entire length , except at one end , where it is narrowed , and was , no doubt , let into a handle of wood , the rivets being visible upon it ; the other end ...
... feet eight inches long , and four and five- eighths inches broad throughout its entire length , except at one end , where it is narrowed , and was , no doubt , let into a handle of wood , the rivets being visible upon it ; the other end ...
Page 79
... feet diameter , he set up a " fire - engine " ( i . e . , an old atmospheric steam - engine ) , to raise water from under the lowest and send it to the upper pond , which supplied water to the works , and put in motion the largest ...
... feet diameter , he set up a " fire - engine " ( i . e . , an old atmospheric steam - engine ) , to raise water from under the lowest and send it to the upper pond , which supplied water to the works , and put in motion the largest ...
Page 91
... feet in diameter , and four feet high , somewhat like an ordinary cupola furnace , lined with fire - bricks ; and at some two inches from the bottom he inserted five twyer pipes , with orifices about three - eighths of an inch in ...
... feet in diameter , and four feet high , somewhat like an ordinary cupola furnace , lined with fire - bricks ; and at some two inches from the bottom he inserted five twyer pipes , with orifices about three - eighths of an inch in ...
Page 140
... feet long . ' He had a collar and padlock round his neck , and was chained to a board , and five fellow culprits , whom Lord Fife describes as the most dreadful crea- tures he ever looked on . ' Money in those days was allowed to be ...
... feet long . ' He had a collar and padlock round his neck , and was chained to a board , and five fellow culprits , whom Lord Fife describes as the most dreadful crea- tures he ever looked on . ' Money in those days was allowed to be ...
Page 144
... feet . The central figure was called by an anonymous critic the mother , and Allan Cunning- ham , who evidently confounded charity with almsgiving , from forgetting at the moment that it was used in our authorised version of the ...
... feet . The central figure was called by an anonymous critic the mother , and Allan Cunning- ham , who evidently confounded charity with almsgiving , from forgetting at the moment that it was used in our authorised version of the ...
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