The Philosophical and Theological Works of ...J. Hodges, 1749 |
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Página 27
... use but Food , were ' tis likely forbidden , to pre- vent their having too great Plenty of Food in that large plentiful Country , from whence whence they had driven the Inhabitants , and were not The State of Nature , & c . 27.
... use but Food , were ' tis likely forbidden , to pre- vent their having too great Plenty of Food in that large plentiful Country , from whence whence they had driven the Inhabitants , and were not The State of Nature , & c . 27.
Página 31
... Countries lye fome deep , fome difficult to be discover'd , fome charg'd with Water , all difficult to be prepar'd , and made of proper Size , Figure , & c . and useful to employ the Heads and Hand of Men , and also to fecure neceffa ...
... Countries lye fome deep , fome difficult to be discover'd , fome charg'd with Water , all difficult to be prepar'd , and made of proper Size , Figure , & c . and useful to employ the Heads and Hand of Men , and also to fecure neceffa ...
Página 38
... Countries , where they can fub- fift to this Day ; and the colder Countries , where nothing can be procur'd , without fowing and Labour , has been a means to force their Inhabitants more ftrictly into Societies , and other Reafons , of ...
... Countries , where they can fub- fift to this Day ; and the colder Countries , where nothing can be procur'd , without fowing and Labour , has been a means to force their Inhabitants more ftrictly into Societies , and other Reafons , of ...
Página 41
... Countries ; I think feveral Sorts , peculiar to each Country , where Men are moft liable to be tempted to run out , and turn favage ; whether there were more placed there of each Sort , or they are fuffered to increase there more by ...
... Countries ; I think feveral Sorts , peculiar to each Country , where Men are moft liable to be tempted to run out , and turn favage ; whether there were more placed there of each Sort , or they are fuffered to increase there more by ...
Página 42
John Hutchinson Robert Spearman, Julius Bate. and cultivated the whole Country , favage Beafts are destroy'd , or brought within Compafs . Those which destroy other Sorts , are destroy'd by the Strength or Policy of Men , by Dogs , Nets ...
John Hutchinson Robert Spearman, Julius Bate. and cultivated the whole Country , favage Beafts are destroy'd , or brought within Compafs . Those which destroy other Sorts , are destroy'd by the Strength or Policy of Men , by Dogs , Nets ...
Términos y frases comunes
Abyſs Affiftance aforefaid alfo Arkendale Beafts becauſe Befides Bodies breed caft cauſe Clay confequently confiderable Cornwall Corpufcles Courſe crack'd Cracks Creatures Defcent deftroy'd Depth deſtroy diſcover Diſtance Duties Earth eldeſt fame feed feems fettled feveral Sorts fhew fhould fhrinking fide Fiffures fill'd fince finking firft firſt Fiſh fmall foft folid fome Places fometimes Food foon form'd formed Fragments fubfided fuch fufficient funk Gill or Dale Grains greateſt Happineſs increaſe Infects Inftincts Inftruction interfect Labour leffer lefs Load luge Maffes Metal metallick Mind moft moftly moſt Mountains muft muſt natural neceffary Neceffity neral Nodules Numbers obferv'd obferved paffing Parents Perfons Pleaſure preferve Proportion purfue purſue Quantity Reaſon reft rife Sand Seafons Senfes ſeveral Shells Shoad Side ſmall Society ſome Spar Spawn Strata of Stone Stratum Surface thefe themſelves ther theſe Things thofe thoſe tion Tops uſeful vaft Vallies Veins Water Young
Pasajes populares
Página 164 - The earth also was corrupt before God, and the earth was filled with violence. And God looked upon the earth, and, behold, it was corrupt; for all flesh had corrupted his way upon the earth.
Página 316 - So like" wise a fissure running, suppose east and west, " that passes down in a perpendicular through ii several strata, frequently terminates, and abuts " upon the solid surface of a stratum, where, " mining horizontally upon the surface of that " stratum, either north or south, at some dis" tance, the miners meet with another fissure, " running on the same point east and west.
Página 331 - ... are so small that they are scarcely discernible. These are indeed the natural conveyances of water, and when once they are opened, it runs incessantly.
Página 331 - Miners, when they come to break up Strata of Stone, that have in them many of thefe Cracks, that are fo fmall that they are hardly difcernable.