| 1842 - 630 páginas
...they were visible were the Gulf of Nicoya and the harbour of San Juan, not directly opposite , hut nearly at right angles to each other, so that we saw...the world which commands a view of the two seas.' — vol'. i. pp. 364 366. (To be continued.) ENGLISH LITERATURE. PART V WORDSWORTH . To appreciate... | |
| Frances Osborne - 1850 - 344 páginas
...distant, and from the great height from which they are seen they appear to be almost at the traveller's feet. It is the only point in the world which commands a view of the two Oceans." GRANDT. " I remember a touching description of a funeral in San Jos4, which will not be out... | |
| Frances Osborne - 1851 - 332 páginas
...distant, and from the great height from which they are seen they appear to be almost at the traveller's feet. It is the only point in the world which commands a view of the two Oceans." GKANDT. " I remember a touching description of a funeral in San Jose", which will not be out... | |
| Fanny Osborne - 1852 - 394 páginas
...distant, and from the great height from which they are seen they appear to be almost at the traveller's feet. It is the only point in the world which commands a view of the two Oceans." GEANDY. " I remember a touching description of a funeral in San Jose, which will not bo out... | |
| William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, Sir John Murray IV, Rowland Edmund Prothero (Baron Ernle) - 1842 - 578 páginas
...Nicoya and the harbour of San Juan, not directly opposite, but nearly at right angles to each othev, so that we saw them without turning the body. In a...the world which commands a view of the two seas.' — vol. i. pp. 364-366. On the 1 3th of February, Mr. Stephens, still in bad health, sets out from... | |
| Robert Walsh, Eliakim Littell, John Jay Smith - 1841 - 564 páginas
...harbour of San Juan, not directly opposite, but nearly at right angles to each other, so that we eaw them without turning the body. In a right line over...view of the two seas ; and I ranked the sight with thosH most interesting occasions when from the top of Mount Sinai I looked out upon the Desert of Arabia,... | |
| 1841 - 520 páginas
...the body. In a right line over the tops of the mountains, neither was more than twenty miles dictant; and, from the great height at which we stood, they...with those most interesting occasions when, from the to)) of Mount Sinai, I looked out upon the desert of Arabia, and from Mount Ног I saw the Dead Sea.... | |
| S. Warrand - 1842 - 626 páginas
...over the tops of the mountains neither was more than twenty miles distant, and from the great-height at which we stood they seemed almost at our feet....the world which commands a view of the two seas.'— vol. i. pp. 364-366. (To be continued.} ENGLISH LITERATURE. PART V. •WORDSWORTH. To appreciate rightly... | |
| |