Lives of the Engineers: With an Account of Their Principal Works, Том 2J. Murray, 1861 |
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... lay a wide extent of open fields . Boar Lane , now nearly the centre of the town , was a kind of airy suburb , in which the principal merchants resided ; and the back of the houses in the upper part of Briggate , now the main street ...
... lay a wide extent of open fields . Boar Lane , now nearly the centre of the town , was a kind of airy suburb , in which the principal merchants resided ; and the back of the houses in the upper part of Briggate , now the main street ...
Страница 5
... laid within Smeaton's recol- lection ) the load of coals and the " horse - pack were readily substi- tuted the one for the other . 99 3 Brockett's Glossary of North Country Words . ' Newcastle , 1825 . proper market for their cloth ...
... laid within Smeaton's recol- lection ) the load of coals and the " horse - pack were readily substi- tuted the one for the other . 99 3 Brockett's Glossary of North Country Words . ' Newcastle , 1825 . proper market for their cloth ...
Страница 11
... laid out his time with a view to getting the most good out of it : so much for study , so much for practical experiments , so much for business , and so much for rest and relaxation . We infer that Smeaton could never have had a large ...
... laid out his time with a view to getting the most good out of it : so much for study , so much for practical experiments , so much for business , and so much for rest and relaxation . We infer that Smeaton could never have had a large ...
Страница 13
... laid out his time with a view to getting the most good out of it : so much for study , much for practical experiments , so much for business , and so much for rest and relaxation . We infer that Smeaton could never have had a large ...
... laid out his time with a view to getting the most good out of it : so much for study , much for practical experiments , so much for business , and so much for rest and relaxation . We infer that Smeaton could never have had a large ...
Страница 31
... laid so far down in the sea - deeps beneath -over which the waves were lashing , and to form a more adequate idea of the very narrow as well as tur- bulent site on which he was expected to erect his building . Three days later he made a ...
... laid so far down in the sea - deeps beneath -over which the waves were lashing , and to form a more adequate idea of the very narrow as well as tur- bulent site on which he was expected to erect his building . Three days later he made a ...
Често срещани думи и фрази
abutments acres adopted afterwards amongst Andrew Little aqueduct arches Austhorpe basin Breakwater building Caledonian Canal canal carried cast iron centre Coalbrookdale coast coffer-dams completely considerable construction depth district docks Dockyard drainage early East East Lothian Eddystone Edinburgh effect Ellesmere Canal employed engineer England entrance erected Eskdale executed extensive feet long feet span feet wide formed harbour Holyhead importance improvement inches iron bridge James Watt John Rennie labour laid land Langholm letter lighthouse locks London London Bridge Lord low water machinery masonry means mechanical Meikle ment miles mills navigation occupied parish Pasley piers port proposed purpose Rennie Rennie's ribs river road Robert Stephenson rock says Scotland secured ships shore Shrewsbury side Smeaton spring tides steam-engine stone Telford Thames tion town valley vessels walls water of spring Waterloo Bridge Westerkirk whilst whole yards
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Страница 104 - And since your leddyship is pleased to speak o' parting wi' us, I am free to tell you a. piece o' my mind in another article. Your leddyship and the steward hae been pleased to propose that my son Cuddie suld work in the barn wi' a new-fangled machine * for dighting the corn frae the chaff, thus impiously thwarting the will of Divine Providence, by raising wind for your leddyship's ain particular use by human art, instead of soliciting it by prayer, or waiting patiently for whatever dispensation...
Страница 41 - There were still many who persisted in asserting that no building erected of stone could possibly stand upon the Eddystone ; and again and again the engineer, in the dim grey of the morning, would come out and peer through his telescope at his deep-sea lamp-post. Sometimes he had to wait long, until he could see a tall white pillar of spray shoot up into the air. Thank God ! it was still safe. Then, as the light grew, he could discern his building, temporary house and all, standing firm amidst the...
Страница 119 - Parliament, statutes and ordains that there be a school settled and established and a schoolmaster appointed in every parish not already provided by advice of the heritors and minister of the parish...
Страница 125 - Pennant's remark that he remembered it " a deep hollow road, and full of sloughs, with here and there a ragged house, the lurking-place of cut-throats ; insomuch," he adds, " that I never was taken that way by night in my hackney-coach to a worthy uncle's, who gave me lodgings in his house in George Street, but I went in dread the whole way.
Страница 367 - Findhorn being in a flood, they were obliged to go up its banks for about twenty-eight miles to the bridge of Dulsie before they could cross. I myself rode circuits when I was Advocate-Depute between 1807 and 1810. The fashion of every Depute carrying his own shell on his back, in the form of his own carriage, is a piece of very modern antiquity.
Страница 125 - There be many smiths in the town that use to make knives and all manner of cutting tools and many lorimers that make bits, and a great many nailers. So that a great part of the town is maintained by smiths. The smiths there have iron out of Staffordshire and Warwickshire and sea coal out of Staffordshire.
Страница 86 - In consequence of the foregoing, I conclude myself nine-tenths dead ; and the greatest favour the Almighty can do me, as I think, will be to complete the other part; but as it is likely to be a lingering illness, it is only in his power to say when that is likely to happen.
Страница 294 - Having acquired," he says in his Autobiography, " the rudiments of my profession, I considered that my native country afforded few opportunities of exercising it to any extent, and therefore judged it advisable (like many of my countrymen) to proceed southward, where industry might find more employment and be better remunerated.
Страница 175 - London. 4to. 1836. /^ANOVA, when he was asked, during his visit to England, ^-^ what struck him most forcibly? is said to have replied — that the trumpery Chinese bridge, then in St. James's Park, should be the production of the government, whilst that of Waterloo was the •work of a private company.
Страница 302 - Quicklime,' and also Fourcroy's Lectures, translated from the French by one Mr. Elliot, of Edinburgh. And I am determined to study the subject with unwearied attention until I attain some accurate knowledge of chemistry, which is of no less use in the practice of the arts than it is in that of medicine.