Vietnam or Thailand ? Vote for the TOP Country of the Week !

Updated: May 6, 2025


The Indian Christian Church, hardly yet acclimatised so far as it is the creation of modern efforts, would she survive? The English sweet-pea, sown in India, produced its flowers, but not at first any vigorous self-propagating seed. The reactionary Theosophists after the provocative action had ceased what of them?

What we have derived directly from the Italian poets are, first, some metres especially the sonnet and the octave stanza, though the latter has never taken firm root in England. 'Terza rima, attempted by Shelley, Byron, Morris, and Mrs. Browning, has not yet become acclimatised.

In 1726, two were brought alive to Batavia, which were caught on the West Coast of Australia, near Hartop Bay, but no good account of their habits was ever written till Gould put together the facts he had seen and learnt on the spot. The habits in their native land of birds which we only see acclimatised and domesticated, sometimes give a clue to what can be done to domesticate other breeds.

My most intimate friend, a young man from Coutances, if I remember right, who had been, transported like myself from a happy home, brooded in solitary grief over the change and died. The natives of Savoy were even less easily acclimatised.

When they were both acclimatised, he with her and she with him, they felt an internal disturbance which resolved itself into secret desires. "Ah!" said the vicar, turning round to his companion, "here is a fine cluster of trees which has grown very thick." "It is too near the road," replied the girl. "Bad boys have cut the branches, and the cows have eaten the young leaves."

Leigh Hunt repeats the tale of Francesca da Rimini. Keats versifies Boccaccio's 'Isabella. Passing to contemporary poets, Rossetti has acclimatised in English the metres and the manner of the earliest Italian lyrists. Swinburne dedicates his noblest song to the spirit of liberty in Italy. Even George Eliot and Tennyson have each of them turned stories of Boccaccio into verse. The best of Mrs.

From a pile of bricks we each had to pick up two and march back to the camp, dump them then return for two more; 10 or 12 such trips gave us the exercise we needed and acclimatised us to the dry heat.

Te-iki-pa, on inspection, pronounced them to be cock and hen, and in healthy condition. The breed, he said, could doubtless be acclimatised. The professors of the museum, by Jones Harvey's request, then closely examined the chickens. The American continent was now endowed, through the enterprise of Mr.

When they were both acclimatised, he with her and she with him, they felt an internal disturbance which resolved itself into secret desires. "Ah!" said the vicar, turning round to his companion, "here is a fine cluster of trees which has grown very thick." "It is too near the road," replied the girl. "Bad boys have cut the branches, and the cows have eaten the young leaves."

There is much truth in this saying, but the real basis of Australian prosperity was the introduction of sheep-farming on a large scale, after the merino-breed had been imported and acclimatised by Macarthur at the beginning of the century.

Word Of The Day

geet

Others Looking