The hue of every precious

The hue of every precious

The hue of every precious stone is found in the colors of the Andes. Even the crevices on the rocky sides of the mountains without verdure seem when the sun shines upon them to be filled and overflowing with warm hues, varying from the softest lilac to the deep, rich, pervading purple which the artist loves to revel in. Each of the Andes, besides his emerald or pearly crown, seems also to wear, like the high priest of old, a jewelled breastplate, reflecting on earth the glory of the skies. The table lands of the Andes, especially when seen from above, resemble the rolling prairies of western North America. Both have the same beautiful and various undulations, though those of the table lands are bolder. The prairies are far more extensive; though, often, the table lands present as broad a horizon of gently curving land. These table lands in some places extend like vast halls between widely separate but parallel chains of the Andes-again, like broad corridors along a line of ridges-again, like wide landings to gigantic stairs, of which the stone steps are mountains-again, they expand in hollows surrounded by hills, like lakes of land.


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By GEORGE H CALVERT Author
But when we reach that
These propositions given in a
Tenez you can almost see
The Indian loved to roam
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We have then three domains
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Soon a jealousy of Hamilton
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etc with harpies the comptroller
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He then proceeded to give
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His warmest admirer could have
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But the canny Scots either
But it should not be
It was to be a
As in the Science of
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Very well said Hortense if
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And as the demand was

It also divided the duties
We may well suppose then
A political skit upon Prince
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The Dynamic Branch of Sociology
It is very obvious that
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This system was continued for
etc Other newspapers bore such
The realists of art may
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THE ANGELS OF WAR Two