The Natural History of Remarkable Trees, Shrubs, and PlantsJ. Cumming, 1821 |
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Page xv
... juice , - and why do trees rise to some height from the earth , before they send off side branches ? Let us remark the final cause of tliese differences of growth , that we may feel a more enlarged gratitude to the Al- mighty , whose ...
... juice , - and why do trees rise to some height from the earth , before they send off side branches ? Let us remark the final cause of tliese differences of growth , that we may feel a more enlarged gratitude to the Al- mighty , whose ...
Page xvii
... juice of which affords a nourishing milk , and from this circumstance it has been named the Cow - tree . The travellers who mention it were informed that the negroes always acquire flesh at the season when the Cow - tree yields the ...
... juice of which affords a nourishing milk , and from this circumstance it has been named the Cow - tree . The travellers who mention it were informed that the negroes always acquire flesh at the season when the Cow - tree yields the ...
Page 28
... juice , is like the reeds we see in mo- rasses and on the edges of lakes , except that the skin of these latter is hard and dry , and their pith void of juice , whereas the skin of the Sugar Cane is soft , and the pith very juicy ...
... juice , is like the reeds we see in mo- rasses and on the edges of lakes , except that the skin of these latter is hard and dry , and their pith void of juice , whereas the skin of the Sugar Cane is soft , and the pith very juicy ...
Page 30
... juice of the Cane , in search of which they wound the tender blades , and consequently destroy the vessels . The growth of the plant is thus checked until it withers or dies in proportion to the degree of the ravage . These insects are ...
... juice of the Cane , in search of which they wound the tender blades , and consequently destroy the vessels . The growth of the plant is thus checked until it withers or dies in proportion to the degree of the ravage . These insects are ...
Page 31
... juice of the Cane , that every individual of the animal creation derives health and vi- gour from its use , in a few weeks after the mill is set in action . The labouring horses , oxen and mules , though almost constantly at work during ...
... juice of the Cane , that every individual of the animal creation derives health and vi- gour from its use , in a few weeks after the mill is set in action . The labouring horses , oxen and mules , though almost constantly at work during ...
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Common terms and phrases
affords afterwards agreeable Amboyna America animals annual plant appears Baobab bark berries blossom boiling branches called Camphor Cane castor oil Chestnut circumference cloth cloves collected colour cork Cork Trees cotton covered cultivated degree distillation dried earth employed Europe feet fibres flavour Flax flowers footstalk fruit gathered green ground grumes heat height hemp inches long India Indian Indies inhabitants insects island Jamaica juice kernel kind leaf leaves liquor manner Molucca islands native nourishment nutmeg nuts poison produce purpose quantity remarkable renders resembles ripe rises root season seeds Senegal sensitive plant serve shell shoots shrub side skin smell soft soil sometimes stalk stem strong substance sugar Sugar Maple surface taste thick thread tion tobacco tree grows trunk vegetable vessel Water Hemlock West Indies whole wind wood yield
Popular passages
Page iii - And out of the ground made the Lord God to grow every tree that is pleasant to the sight, and good for food; the tree of life also in the midst of the garden, and the tree of knowledge of good and evil.
Page 141 - ... no vent but by the gutter, gradually ascends it, and from thence advances slowly to the extremity of the valley, where it is...
Page 24 - ... every branch from the main body throws out its own roots, at first in small tender fibres, several yards from the ground...
Page 139 - Every professed, inveterate, and incurable snuff-taker, (says Lord Stanhope) at a moderate computation takes one pinch in ten minutes. Every pinch, with the agreeable ceremony of blowing and wiping the nose, and other incidental circumstances, consumes a minute and a half. One minute and a half, out of every ten, allowing sixteen hours to a snuff-taking day, amounts to two hours and twenty-four minutes out of every natural day, or one day out of every ten.
Page 124 - Let India boast her plants, nor envy we The weeping amber, or the balmy tree, While by our oaks the precious loads are borne, And realms commanded which those trees adorn.
Page 142 - On the morning of the fourth day, we came out on a large plain, where were great numbers of fine deer; and in the middle stood a tree of unusual size, spreading its branches over a vast compass of ground.
Page xii - All these singularities contribute to one end. " As this plant blossoms late in the year, and, probably, would not have time to ripen its seeds before the access of winter, which would destroy them, Providence has contrived its structure such, that this important office maybe performed at a depth in the earth out of reach of the usual effects of frost...
Page 106 - The kernel is enveloped in a sweet pulp, under a thin green rind ; and the butter produced from it, besides the advantage, of its keeping the whole year without salt, is whiter, firmer, and, to my palate, of a richer flavour than the best butter I ever tasted made from cow's milk.
Page 157 - July and August. The largest leaves are about three inches long, and an inch and a half across the lobes : the glands of those exposed to the sun are of a beautiful red color ; but those in the shade are pale, and inclining to green.
Page 113 - Glasgow was sent by coach to London. It is difficult to ascertain precisely the time taken to bring this article to market; but it may be pretty near the truth to reckon it three years from the time it was packed in India till in cloth it arrived at the merchant's warehouse in London...