| Heinrich Schröder (i.e. Franz Johannes Heinrich) - 1911 - 732 σελίδες
...descending into the abyss, into the mouth of the bubbling fountain they disappear .... when behold them äs it were emerging from the blue ether of another world, apparently at a vast distance, at their first appearance no bigger than flies and minnows, now gradually enlarging,... | |
| Robert Finch, John Elder - 1990 - 930 σελίδες
...bubbling fountain: they disappear! are they gone for ever? I raise my eyes with terror and astonishment; I look down again to the fountain with anxiety, when...from the blue ether of another world, apparently at a vast distance; at their first appearance, no bigger than flies or minnows; now gradually enlarging,... | |
| Robert Finch, John Elder - 2002 - 1160 σελίδες
...bubbling fountain: they disappear! are they gone for ever? I raise my eyes with terror and astonishment; volution. Its sequences may be described in ecological...terms. An ethic, ecologically, is a limitation on freed vast distance; at their first appearance, no bigger than flies or minnows; now gradually enlarging,... | |
| William Bartram - 2007 - 437 σελίδες
...bubbling fountain: they disappear! are they gone for ever? I raise my eyes with terror and astonishment; 1 look down again to the fountain with anxiety, when...from the blue ether of another world, apparently at a vast distance; at their first appearance, no bigger than flies or minnows; now gradually enlarging,... | |
| Doug Stamm - 2008 - 122 σελίδες
...I raise my eyes with terror and astonishment. I look down again to the fountain with anxiety, then behold them as it were emerging from the blue ether of another world. . . ." — William Bartram, 1775 < Ichetucknee Springs State Park, Columbia County The mouth of a subterranean... | |
| Allgemeiner deutscher neuphilologen-verband - 1908 - 534 σελίδες
...descending into the abyss, into the mouth of the bubbling fountain they disappear when behold them äs it were emerging from the blue ether of another world, apparently at a vast distance, at their first appearance no bigger than flies and minnows, now gradually enlarging.... | |
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