A statistical account of the British empire, Volume 1 |
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Page 34
... trade of London must be , in a great degree , imaginary . The foreign trade of Liverpool , Glasgow , and Hull , particularly the first , from their situation in the coal and manufacturing districts , may , it is to be fairly presumed ...
... trade of London must be , in a great degree , imaginary . The foreign trade of Liverpool , Glasgow , and Hull , particularly the first , from their situation in the coal and manufacturing districts , may , it is to be fairly presumed ...
Page 35
... trading towns of Staffordshire , Warwickshire , & c .; and is united with the Thames , the Trent , and the Mersey . From Welsh- pool to the sea it has a gradual fall of 225 feet . — ( Priestley on In- land Navigation , & c . p . 596 ...
... trading towns of Staffordshire , Warwickshire , & c .; and is united with the Thames , the Trent , and the Mersey . From Welsh- pool to the sea it has a gradual fall of 225 feet . — ( Priestley on In- land Navigation , & c . p . 596 ...
Page 40
... trade ; and it had also an extensive intercourse with the south of France , Spain , and the Mediterranean . But the gradual filling up of the channel of the river proved in the end destructive of its trade . To- wards the close of the ...
... trade ; and it had also an extensive intercourse with the south of France , Spain , and the Mediterranean . But the gradual filling up of the channel of the river proved in the end destructive of its trade . To- wards the close of the ...
Page 41
... trade . As a shipping port , it is inferior only to London . The towns of North and South Shields are , however , the proper ports of the Tyne . Tees . The sources of this river are contiguous to those of the South Tyne . At first it ...
... trade . As a shipping port , it is inferior only to London . The towns of North and South Shields are , however , the proper ports of the Tyne . Tees . The sources of this river are contiguous to those of the South Tyne . At first it ...
Page 42
... trade than any place on the Wash ; but the access to its port continues , notwithstanding the improvements , to be rather intricate and difficult . Almost all the rivers that fall into the Wash run , for a considerable part of their ...
... trade than any place on the Wash ; but the access to its port continues , notwithstanding the improvements , to be rather intricate and difficult . Almost all the rivers that fall into the Wash run , for a considerable part of their ...
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A Statistical Account of the British Empire: Exhibiting Its ..., Volumes 1-2 John Ramsay McCulloch No preview available - 1839 |
Common terms and phrases
Aberdeenshire acres æstuary Annual value arable Average rent barley basalt beds bogs boroughs breed Bristol Channel Britain canal cattle chalk Channel Cheshire clay climate coal coast considerable contains crops cultivated Derbyshire district ditto divided east eastern elevation England extensive farms feet fertile former Frith greywacke harbour Head hills improved inhabitants Inverness Inverness-shire Ireland Irish Sea island Isle lakes Lancashire latter lighthouse limestone Lincolnshire loam Loch London Lough Lough Neagh manufacture maritime county members to parliament miles mountains navigable nearly north-east north-west northern oats oolite parishes pasture Perthshire places Population of county Principal rivers Principal towns property in 1815 quantity real property rent of land rocks sand sandstone Scotch Scotland sheep shire side slate soil south-west southern species square miles Staffordshire strata supposed surface Survey Thames tillage towns and population tracts turnips vale value of real Wales western wheat Yorkshire
Popular passages
Page 651 - Committee of the House of Commons, appointed to inquire into the Bankrupt Laws ; and i This and the two preceding motions were lost by large majorities.
Page 262 - But o'er the twilight groves and dusky caves, Long-sounding aisles and intermingled graves, Black Melancholy sits, and round her throws A death-like silence, and a dread repose: Her gloomy presence saddens all the scene, Shades every flower, and darkens every green, Deepens the murmur of the falling floods, And breathes a browner horror on the woods.
Page 110 - from the cedar of Lebanon, to the hyssop that springeth out of the wall ;" that is, from the greatest to the least.
Page 186 - Though I have said they are happy, yet I should note that it, was remarked to me, that the little proprietors work like Negroes, and do not live so well as the inhabitants of the poor-house ; but all is made amends for by possessing land.
Page 196 - Cambridgeshire ; on the East by Essex, on the south by Middlesex, and on the west by Bucks and Bedford.
Page 98 - England, that loved and esteemed his own country : 'twas in reply to some of the company that were reviling our climate, and extolling those of Italy and Spain, or at least of France : he said, he thought that was the best climate, where he could be abroad in the air with pleasure, or at least without trouble...
Page 6 - Survey, vol. ii. p. 310.) Figure and Extent. — The figure of this grand division of great Britain is triangular : the base of the triangle being formed by a line drawn from the South Foreland in Kent, to the Land's End in Cornwall ; the eastern side by a line drawn from the South Foreland to Berwick; and the western, or longest side, by a line drawn from Berwick to the Land's End. It is bounded on all sides by the sea, except on the north, where it unites with Scotland ; from which it is separated...
Page 701 - ... miraculous. By the agency of a great deal of complicated machinery, so admirably contrived as to produce the intended effect with unerring precision, and in the very best manner, a process which, in the old system of paper-making, occupied about three weeks is performed in as many minutes ! A continuous stream of fluid pulp is, within this brief space of time, and the short distance of thirty feet, not only made into paper, but actually dried, polished, and every separate sheet cut round the...
Page 120 - ... very severe weather. When it is necessary to kill any, they are always shot ; if the keeper only wounds the beast, he must take care to keep behind some tree, or his life would be in danger from. the furious attacks of the animal ; which will never desist till a period is put to its life.
Page 685 - I was surprised at the prodigious number of blacksmiths' shops upon the road ; and could not conceive how a country, though populous, could support so many people of the same occupation. In some of these shops I observed one or more females...