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LADIES FASHIONS FOR MARCH

... arnd Viscount Canterbury, of the city of Canterbury. -Losno,, GfAette. aejor-G(eti. Sir L. Smith, Governor of the Windward Caribbean Islauds, has beenr also appointed Govetnor of British Guiana, Trinidad, aid St. Lwcia.-His Majesty has revived the Commissions ...

LITERATURE

... all precedents haves ben arrayed in suopoe of ttirt side of the question-thse annihilation of thte ancient Mexicains and Caribbean tribes by the Spaniards' the disappear- ince of North American Indian tribes, by thr colonial hordes froam Francs, Spain ...

THE JUBILEE

... ne'er again shall wear the bandsman's yoke, Whilst Britain's mighty standard waves amidst The Isles which stud the wil! Caribbean seas I Oh, First of Augustl each returning year ?? thy return with jubilee be hailed, And joyful shootings usher in thy birth ...

LITERATURE

... mintister itt the wants, cosi'orts atid luxuries of mali arc tendered itt lavish profusion. Yet an itisigitificatt island in the Caribbean seas, excites more of our attecitioti thant an empire which would hare quetclhcd the ambi- tioti of Alexatnder, w hose armics ...

LITERATURE

... fall flow of his communications. As it is, however, the instruction conveyed respect- ing the tides and currents of the Caribbean sea- respecting earthquakes and hurricanes and their cyclical recurrences-respecting the sanitary condition (actual and possible) ...

LITERATURE

... the native tribes of Panamv and Central America, and even some coincidences in the names of places around the Mexican and Caribbean seas. Two distinct styles of costure may be recognised in paintings of aboriginal Americans; and the cinctureeand wreath ...

THE GREAT EXHIBITION

... and the Franklin, of the Havre line, which sails on the 5th proximo, touchingat Southampton, will go full. The steamship Caribbean, now very nearly completed, will be run between New York and England, and, should the demand justify, other steamers will ...

Published: Sunday 30 March 1851
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 2450 | Page: 13 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

HISTORICAL AND GEOGRAPHICAL SKETCHES OF NORTH AMERICA

... Is an opening from the Gulf of Mexico into the f Caribbean Sea. It may here be as easily named as anywhere, ) that the heated waters of the South Atlantio Ocean pass in a Z.current through the Caribbean Sea, and through the opening last named into the ...

LITERATURE

... hroad. ft is 12 il. frotn thle hi Pacific, froum which it ii separated by a ridge of volcanic su hills, atllt S0 from the Caribbean Sea. It receives the at wateis ?? Le;e Leoe fron tbte N.A., and di y targeshythe bi Sait Jisas i nto the Caribhban Sea. h-eight ...

LITERATURE

... idea of e, clanging the ancient Panama route to that from ed Puerto Caballos (or Cortez) on the Atlantic, or ter rather Caribbean Sea, to the bay of Fonseca in the !x- South Sea, is by no means a novelty, It was sug- us gested as early as 1556 by Juan ...

LITERATURE

... evangelical and national antipathies to the Pepibtical Empire of Spain, E sailed forth to make prize of rich galleons in the c Caribbean sea, or to make havoc of the new Spanish E ports and settlements on the rivers of NorthAmerica. E Yet the peaceful colonists ...

LITERATURE

... with a strong belief in its le accuracy; and it will be seen by the following pas- ci sage, descriptive of a sunset in the Caribbean Sea, Pi that the author is able to depict with minute fidelity Be an appearance not easily referable to ordinary T standards ...