Sips of thebalsamic syrup are free to all, and birds and insects rejoice and are glad.
Balsamic remedies received the approbation of the medical profession as the most specific of internal remedies for this disease.
Here I will only be a man, and forgetting my cramping highness and my forced splendor, will here right humanly enjoy the sun and this soft green grass, and in deep draughts inhale this sweet balsamic air.
Romanic as if it were the article), a balsamic resin obtained from Styrax benzoin, a tree of considerable size, native to Sumatra and Java, and from other species of Styrax.
It is a soft resinous substance, with a pleasing balsamic odour, especially after it [v.
It is a thick, viscid oleo-resin of a deep brown or black colour and a fragrant balsamic odour.
Styrax officinale, a native of the Levant, furnishes the balsamic resinous substance known as storax, which is also one of the materials manipulated by perfumers, and in medicine is used as a stimulating expectorant.
As the basis of this tea is the combined principle of the most balsamic oils, nutritious salts, and animating sulphurs, which the vegetable world produces, their effects must be proportionably salutary.
All these virtues may be said to be derived from the union of their balsamic oil and volatile salt.
Solander employed his researches to form an afternoon beverage of such herbs as should possess all the above cardiac and balsamic qualities.
And with regard to their balsamic and aromatic nature, these qualities warm the stomach and expel wind, by rarefying the flatuous exhalations from chyle in the prima viæ.
I could not bear the confinement of my hotel; I wanted to cool the fever of revenge that burnt in me in the balsamic night air.
Is this the same earth that exhaled a soft, balsamic breath, like the kiss of a loved one?
I stood on her deck inhaling with delight the pure balsamic air, viewing with enchanted eyes the glorious scenery.
We greatly enjoyed the mild balsamic air that blew towards us from the green forest, after our four days’ voyage, and we should have enjoyed it still more but for the load we had to carry.
He divides mummies into those in which tanno-balsamic substances had been introduced, and those that had merely been salted.
The Cerambix suaveolens emits a delicious smell of roses, and the Petiolated sphex a highly fragrant balsamic ether.
Let us, therefore, hold as fools Such as now feign to despise Those balsamic molecules Horace used to sing and prize.
Fium, a province of central Egypt, which the ancients called the Garden of Egypt, was distinguished for innumerable species of the rose, and especially for those of the most balsamic order, and for the most costly preparations from it.
It is exceedingly abundant, covering considerable areas and filling the air with its balsamic fragrance, strongly suggestive of tansy, though to many not so agreeable as the latter.
Though some of them are described as having a disagreeable odor, many of them have a very pleasant balsamic fragrance, which gives our summer and autumn atmosphere a peculiar character of its own.
The air was heavy with the balsamic fragrance of the boughs, and the birds sang merrily although it was midday.
It was all deserted, and the air was heavy with old incense and with the balsamicperfume of the leaves and branches that had fallen to the floor and been trampled upon during the mass of the previous night.
She had faith in the balsamic virtue of the atmosphere in and around King's Charteris, and she knew that Jim spent two days out of each week with his mother.
The heady, balsamic odour of the pines exhilarated us, and the wind, playing melancholy music on the Eolian harps of their branches, seemed like a deep accompaniment to the humming throb of the tireless motor.
Thus on through Labouheyre to Castets, still walled in with dark, balsamic forest, where we lunched.
These fir trees had a sort of sticky, balsamic juice that exuded plentifully from them wherever they were cut.
The generic name, from {myrrha}, relates to the balsamic properties of the plants of this genus.
Amyris is fragrant and yields a balsamic aromatic and stimulant resin, and heavy hard close-grained wood valuable as fuel and sometimes used in cabinet-making.
It is filled with a balsamic odour of a dusky colour, and a very sweet scent, but extremely bitter.
For fruit, it bears pods or bags, which are about a span long, and have a balsamic odour.
I've included red wine vinegar in case you can't find balsamic vinegar, but the balsamic vinegar is terrific in this recipe, and it's worth having on hand for salad dressings afterwards.