Tales of Animals: Comprising Quadrupeds, Birds, Fishes, Reptiles, and InsectsThomas Tegg and Son, 1837 - 327 psl. |
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6 psl.
... light by lamps and candles . This peculiar kind of eye , therefore , is necessary to the Lion to perceive his prey and he creeps toward it with a certainty which nothing but this distinct nocturnal vision could give . You must have ...
... light by lamps and candles . This peculiar kind of eye , therefore , is necessary to the Lion to perceive his prey and he creeps toward it with a certainty which nothing but this distinct nocturnal vision could give . You must have ...
12 psl.
... light , he walked up the hill with the man in his mouth , when about forty shots were fired at him without hitting him , although some were very near . Every time this happened he turned round towards the tent , and came roaring towards ...
... light , he walked up the hill with the man in his mouth , when about forty shots were fired at him without hitting him , although some were very near . Every time this happened he turned round towards the tent , and came roaring towards ...
31 psl.
... light brown . HABITS . He is very nimble , and climbs trees with ease ; he prowls in woods and thickets for deer , sheep , and other animals . He is fond of killing , and will often destroy more than he has occasion for as food . NATIVE ...
... light brown . HABITS . He is very nimble , and climbs trees with ease ; he prowls in woods and thickets for deer , sheep , and other animals . He is fond of killing , and will often destroy more than he has occasion for as food . NATIVE ...
55 psl.
... light loads . They are commonly employed in the vicinity of large towns to carry vegetables to market . They have been lately used in London and the neighbour- hood for similar purposes . The Newfoundland Dogs , one of the most active ...
... light loads . They are commonly employed in the vicinity of large towns to carry vegetables to market . They have been lately used in London and the neighbour- hood for similar purposes . The Newfoundland Dogs , one of the most active ...
56 psl.
... Light and lively colours greatly increase his rage . At the end of thirty or thirty - six hours he dies in convulsions . • After various remedies for this terrible malady have been tried in vain , it seems now agreed that cutting or ...
... Light and lively colours greatly increase his rage . At the end of thirty or thirty - six hours he dies in convulsions . • After various remedies for this terrible malady have been tried in vain , it seems now agreed that cutting or ...
Pagrindiniai terminai ir frazės
abundant Africa AMERICAN BLACK BEAR animal appearance Asia attack beautiful belly bird body breast brown burrows cage called Camel Chamois claws colour common cornac COUNTRIES creature CURIOUS PARTICULARS deer devours domestic domestic turkey Eagle eggs Elephant England Europe EUROPEAN OTTER eyes Fallow Deer favourite feathers feeds feet in length female fish flesh fond fore forests four frequently gray ground HABITS hair head Hippopotamus horns horse hundred Hyæna inches in length inhabits insects killed kind known legs Lion lives Mastodon mouth native nearly neck nest NEWFOUNDLAND DOG night North northern Ourang-outang Panther paws pine marten plumage pounds prey quadrupeds remarkable resembles rivers seen seldom shell skin sometimes South America species spot Squirrel stag strength tail tamed teeth Tiger trees Vulture Whale wild Wild Cat wings winter Wood Thrush woods yellow young
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255 psl. - There is a Power whose care Teaches thy way along that pathless coast, The desert and illimitable air, Lone wandering, but not lost. All day thy wings have fanned, At that far height, the cold thin atmosphere, Yet stoop not, weary, to the welcome land, Though the dark night is near.
255 psl. - midst falling dew, While glow the heavens with the last steps of day, Far, through their rosy depths, dost thou pursue Thy solitary way ? Vainly the fowler's eye Might mark thy distant flight to do thee wrong, As, darkly painted on the crimson sky, Thy figure floats along.
285 psl. - Notwithstanding, lest we should offend them, go thou to the sea, and cast an hook, and take up the fish that first cometh up ; and when thou hast opened his mouth, thou shalt find a piece of money : that take, and give unto them for me and thee.
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60 psl. - ... of the convent to their assistance. To provide for the chance that the dogs, without human help, may succeed in discovering the unfortunate traveller, one of them has a flask of spirits round his neck, to which the fainting man may apply for support; and another has a cloak to cover him. These wonderful exertions are often successful; and even where they fail of restoring him who has perished, the dogs discover the body, so that it may be secured for the recognition of friends; and such is the...
79 psl. - I am going to yield thee up ? To Europeans, who will tie thee close, — who will beat thee, — who will render thee miserable. Return with me, my beauty, my jewel, and rejoice the hearts, of my children.
9 psl. - ... his face, without the least appearance of fear. The lion, conscious of his strength, remained unmoved at their noisy attempts, and kept his head turned towards us. At one moment the dogs, perceiving his eye thus engaged, had advanced close to his feet, and seemed as if they would actually seize hold of him ; but they paid dearly for their imprudence, for, without discomposing the majestic and steady attitude in which he stood fixed, he merely moved his paw, and at the next instant I beheld two...
59 psl. - Benumbed with cold, weary in the search for a lost track, his senses yielding to the stupifying influence of frost, which betrays the exhausted sufferer into a deep sleep, the unhappy man sinks upon the ground, and the snow-drift covers him from human sight. It is then that the keen scent and the exquisite docility of these admirable dogs are called into action. Though the perishing man lie ten or even twenty feet beneath the snow, the delicacy of smell with which they can trace him offers a chance...
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