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" And that nothing may be wanting to this land of marvels, the forests are skirted by enormous meadows, which, reeking with heat and moisture, supply nourishment to countless herds of wild cattle, that browse and fatten on their herbage; while the adjoining... "
The Wisconsin Farmer - 第 214 頁
1864
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The Eclectic Magazine of Foreign Literature, Science, and Art, 第 49 卷

1860 - 620 頁
...plains, rich in another form of life, are the chosen abode of the subtlest and most ferocious « Op. cit animals, which prey on each other, but which it might almost seem no human power can hope to extirpate But amid this pomp and splendor of Nature, no place is left for man. He is reduced to msignificance...
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History of Civilization in England, 第 1 卷

Henry Thomas Buckle - 1857 - 882 頁
...that browse and fatten on their herbage; while the adjoining plains, rich in another form of life, are the chosen abode of the subtlest and most ferocious...which it might almost seem no human power can hope to extirpate.151 1M Dr. Gardner, who looked at these things with the eye of a botanist, says that near...
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The Journal of Psychological Medicine and Mental Pathology, 第 11 卷

1858 - 754 頁
...their herbage; while the adjoining plains, rich in another SO. X.—NEW SERIES. 0 form of life, are the chosen abode of the subtlest and most ferocious...above all the other countries of the earth. " But amid this pomp and splendour of nature, no place is left for man ; he is reduced to insignificance...
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The Ecclesiastic [afterw.] The Theologian and ecclesiastic [afterw ..., 第 20 卷

1858 - 604 頁
...on their herbage ; while the adjoining plains, rich in another form of life, are the chosen abodes of the subtlest and most ferocious animals, which...which it might almost seem no human power can hope to extirpate."—Pp. 93, 94. Now, with such a soil and so advantageous a climate,—with all the ingredients...
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History of Civilization in England, 第 1 卷

Henry Thomas Buckle - 1858 - 752 頁
...animals, which prey on each other, but which it might almost seem no human power can hope to extirpate.151 Such is the flow and abundance of life by which Brazil is marked above all the other countries of the earth.1" But, amid this pomp and splendour of Nature, no place is left for Man. He is reduced to insignificance...
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The Eclectic Review, 第 2 卷﹔第 110 卷

Samuel Greatheed, Daniel Parken, Theophilus Williams, Josiah Conder, Thomas Price, Jonathan Edwards Ryland, Edwin Paxton Hood - 1859 - 856 頁
...browse and fatten on their herbage ; while the adjoining plains, rich in another form of life, are the chosen abode of the subtlest and most ferocious...might almost seem no human power can hope to extirpate But amid this pomp and splendour of Nature, no place is left for man. He is reduced to insignificance...
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Eclectic Magazine, and Monthly Edition of the Living Age, 第 49 卷

John Holmes Agnew, Walter Hilliard Bidwell - 1860 - 624 頁
...plains, rich in another form of life, are the chosen abode of the subtlest and most ferocious Op. cit. animals, which prey on each other, but which it might almost seem no human power can hope to extirpate But amid this pomp and splendor of Nature, no place is left for man. He is reduced to insignificance...
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History of Civilization in England, 第 1 卷

Henry Thomas Buckle - 1857 - 886 頁
...browse and fatten on their herbage ; while the adjoining plains, rich in another form of life, are the chosen abode of the subtlest and most ferocious...which it might almost seem no human power can hope to extirpate.151 1M Dr. Gardner, who looked at these things with the eye of a botanist, says that near...
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History of Civilization in England, 第 1 卷

Henry Thomas Buckle - 1865 - 724 頁
...heat, aa if we were dissolving into vapour." the adjoining plains, rich in another form of life, are the chosen abode of the subtlest and most ferocious...almost seem no human power can hope to extirpate. 1S l Such is the flow and abundance of life by which Brazil is marked above all the other countries...
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History of Civilization in England, 第 1 卷

Henry Thomas Buckle - 1870 - 724 頁
...another form of life, are the chosen al>ode of the subtlest and most ferocious animals, which prey op each other, but which it might almost seem no human power can hope to extirpate.151 Such is the flow and abundance of life by which Brazil is marked above all the other...
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