The British Palladium: Or, Annual Miscellany of Literature and Science for the Year ..., Volume 3D. Steel., 1753 - Almanacs, English |
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Page 11
... rises with the Sun 317H.W. Lon B. 3 A. 57. L. W. Graves . 8 A. 571 7 A59 vii . Smart Satyrifts of the Age , beating the Defart Rounds of Imagination , & c . O ye that have Good and IlNature , Wit and Manners at Will , remember that the ...
... rises with the Sun 317H.W. Lon B. 3 A. 57. L. W. Graves . 8 A. 571 7 A59 vii . Smart Satyrifts of the Age , beating the Defart Rounds of Imagination , & c . O ye that have Good and IlNature , Wit and Manners at Will , remember that the ...
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Aftern Aftronomical alfo anfwer'd anfwered Angle Area becauſe Bifh Cafe Chriftian Cofine confequently correfpond Dartford Day decreas'd Day-br defcribed defired Diameter Diary Diff Diſtance Eafter Eclipfe Ellipfis Enigmas Equation ev'ry faft faid fame feen fent Festival fets fhall fhew fhould firft firſt Fluxions folved fome foon ftill fuch Full Moon fuppofe greateſt happen himſelf Holden Inches increas'd Intereft Jewish John Julian Period L. W. Gravef Ladies Laft Quarter laft Year's Latitude Lincolnshire London Midheaven Moon Souths Morn muſt Night Number obferved paft Palladium Parabola Parallax Parallelogram paſt Paul Sharp Perfon Phlegon pleaſe Pleaſure prefent Queft Quere Queſtion Reaſon Refpect Sets Sine Solution Sun rifes Sun-fet Sun's Declination Sunday after Trinity Tang thefe theſe thofe Thomas Huntley thoſe thro Triangle Trin uſeful Velocity vernal Equinox vifible Wellingborough whence whofe Yarum
Popular passages
Page 18 - Two principles in human nature reign; Self-love, to urge, and reason, to restrain; Nor this a good, nor that a bad we call, Each works its end, to move or govern all: And to their proper operation still Ascribe all good; to their improper, ill.
Page 47 - Point ; which is this, that it is worfe taken if a Man pays in more than his Proportion, than if he had not contributed his full Quota, provided he be not too far deficient : For the Prevention of which, let us have Horace's Caution continually in our Eye, The indifcrtet iiiith blind A'verjton run Into one fault, tahen they another jhun.
Page 47 - Oppofition, to a Man of tolerable Senfe, will be the ftrongeft Reproof for his Inadvertency : Whereas a Perfon of a loquacious Difpofition, may often efcape open Cenfure from the Refpect due to his Quality ; or from an Apprehenfion in thofe with whom he converfes, that a Check would but increafe the Evil; and, like, curbing a hard-mouthed Horfe, ferve only to make him run. the fafter: From whence the Perfon in fault is often rivetted in his Error, by miftaking a filent Contempt for profound Attention,...
Page 46 - Before the sparkling lamps on high Were kindled up, and hung around the sky! Before the sun led on the circling hours, Or vital seeds produced their active powers, Before the first intelligences strung Their golden harps, and soft preludiums sung To Love, the mighty cause whence their existence sprung, Th' ineffable DIVINITY, His own resemblance meets in thee.
Page 48 - Artificial Teeth, set in so firm as to eat with them, and so exact, as not to be distinguishable from natural. They are not to be taken out at night, as is by some falsely suggested, but may be worn years together ; yet they are so fitted, that they may be taken...
Page 48 - Person who wears them at pleasure, and are an Ornament to the Mouth, and greatly help the Speech : Also Teeth are cleaned and drawn by Samuel Butter and William Green, Operators, who apply themselves wholly to the said Business, and live in Racquet Court, Fleet Street, London.
Page 31 - She gives in large recruits of needful pride ; For as in bodies, thus in fouls, we find What wants in blood and fpirits, fwelFd with wind : Pride, where Wit fails, fteps in to our defence, And fills up all the mighty void of fenfe...
Page 1 - Containing Many Useful and Entertaining Particulars. Peculiarly Adapted to the ingenious Gentlemen engaged in the delightful Study and Practice of the Mathematics".
Page 47 - When they are all dipped, well fcoured with foap, and cleanfed from the tallow, let them be weighed, (or they may be all weighed, before dipping) and fay, as the weight of them, all in pounds is to. the late-found fuperficies of them all in fquare inch...
Page 18 - A fharp accufer, but a helplefs friend! Or from a judge turn pleader, to perfuade The choice we make, or juftify it made ; Proud of an eafy conqueft all along, She but removes weak paffions for the ftrong, So, when fmall humours gather to a gout, The doftor fancies he has driv'n them out.