... ever walked again. It was a severe struggle for life itself; and when his ship was paid off, in the next October, he was still undergoing much pain from the exfoliation of the bone. He solaced his enforced leisure by work, preparing for the Admiralty... Revue Hydrographique - Page 1441924Full view - About this book
| Geological Society of London - 1858 - 914 pages
...from the exfoliation of the bone. He solaced his enforced leisure by work, preparing for the Admiralty such a set of charts of the coasts of Asia Minor,...Archipelago, the Black Sea, and Africa, as had never before been seen at the Admiralty. They were so drawn, finished, and arranged as to be fit for transference... | |
| 1858 - 192 pages
...from the exfoliation of the bone. He solaced his enforced leisure by work, preparing for the Admiralty such a set of charts of the coasts of Asia Minor,...Archipelago, the Black Sea, and Africa as had never before been seen at the Admiralty. They were so drawn, finished, and arranged as to be fit for transference... | |
| Joseph Ellison Portlock - 1858 - 154 pages
...from the exfoliation of the bone. He solaced his enforced leisure by work, preparing for the Admiralty such a set of charts of the coasts of Asia Minor,...Archipelago, the Black Sea, and Africa, as had never before been seen at the Admiralty. They were so drawn, finished, and arranged as to be fit for transference... | |
| Llewellyn Styles Dawson - 1885 - 234 pages
...of which he nearly lost his life. He employed his enforced leisure by preparing for the Admiralty, a set of charts of the coasts of Asia Minor, the Archipelago, Black Sea, and Northern Africa, finished and arranged so as to be fit for engraving without further... | |
| Harriet Martineau - 1888 - 548 pages
...from the exfoliation of the bone. He solaced his enforced leisure by work, preparing for the Admiralty such a set of charts of the coasts of Asia Minor,...Archipelago, the Black Sea, and Africa, as had never before been seen at the Admiralty. They were so drawn, finished, and arranged as to be fit for transference... | |
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