| Sir Paul Edmund de Strzelecki, Paul Edmund de Strzelecki - 1845 - 572 pages
...of both these countries, is the healthiness of the English settlers who have taken root in the soil. No endemic disease, and seldom any epidemic of grave...with which the English race cling to their original modes of living, wherever they settle, and, however different their adopted may be, to their native... | |
| William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, Sir John Murray IV, Rowland Edmund Prothero (Baron Ernle) - 1845 - 632 pages
...of both these countries is the healthiness of the English settlers who have taken root on the soil. No endemic disease, and seldom any epidemic of grave...pertinacity with which the English race cling to their oiiginal modfs of living, wherever they settle, and however different their adopted may be from their... | |
| John Dunmore Lang - 1847 - 472 pages
...of both these countries, is the healthiness of the English settlers who have taken root in the soil. No endemic disease, and seldom any epidemic" of grave...with which the English race cling to their original modes of living wherever they settle, and however different their adopted may be to their native climate... | |
| John Dunmore Lang - 1847 - 484 pages
...English settlers who have taken root in the soil. No endemic disease, and seldom any cpiilemic•of grave character prevails ; and if individual indisposition,...with which the English race cling to their original modes of living wherever they settle, and however different their adopted may be to their native climate... | |
| John Dunmore Lang - 1852 - 702 pages
...salubrity of these countries is the healthiness of the English settlers who have taken root in the soil. No endemic disease, and seldom any epidemic of grave...with which the English race cling to their original modes of living, wherever they settle, and however different their adopted may be to their native climate... | |
| George Houstoun Reid - 1876 - 218 pages
...of the English settlers who have taken root in the soil. No endemic disease and seldom epidemic of a grave character prevails; and if individual indisposition,...with which the English race cling to their original modes of living wherever they settle, and however different their adopted may be from their native... | |
| William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, Sir John Murray IV, Rowland Edmund Prothero (Baron Ernle) - 1845 - 610 pages
...of both these countries is the healthiness of the English settlers who have taken root on the soil. No endemic disease, and seldom any epidemic of grave...with which the English race cling to their original modes of living, wherever they settle, and however different their adopted may be from their native... | |
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