In Tropical Lands: Recent Travels to the Sources of the Amazon, the West Indian Islands, and CeylonD. Wyllie, 1895 - 193 halaman |
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Halaman
... in Ceylon , 148 149 153 162 The Tea Era , 167 · Life in Ceylon , 171 Story of British Occupation , 173 The Planters -- Typical Failures , 177 The Story of Davie Hacket , 177 INDEX , 191 10 TRUXILLO 78 77 SANTA CHIMBOTE 12 SUCHIMAN • CASMA.
... in Ceylon , 148 149 153 162 The Tea Era , 167 · Life in Ceylon , 171 Story of British Occupation , 173 The Planters -- Typical Failures , 177 The Story of Davie Hacket , 177 INDEX , 191 10 TRUXILLO 78 77 SANTA CHIMBOTE 12 SUCHIMAN • CASMA.
Halaman 39
... British pioneers too often take to civilise such aborigines will be avoided in this case ; and who knows but even the Chuncho may in the course of time learn the arts of civilised life ? Anything that would stimulate such dormant ...
... British pioneers too often take to civilise such aborigines will be avoided in this case ; and who knows but even the Chuncho may in the course of time learn the arts of civilised life ? Anything that would stimulate such dormant ...
Halaman 40
... British Corporation , the concession having been duly ratified by the Peruvian Government , and arrangements are in progress for establishing a planting colony upon a scale never before attempted in Peru . This land , as selected and ...
... British Corporation , the concession having been duly ratified by the Peruvian Government , and arrangements are in progress for establishing a planting colony upon a scale never before attempted in Peru . This land , as selected and ...
Halaman 48
... of Edinburgh , who had for some time resided in Peru as agent for the British and Foreign Bible Society . He wrote home to his friends as follows : - - 66 The Battle of Junin . 49 ' Having touched 48 Travels in Tropical Lands .
... of Edinburgh , who had for some time resided in Peru as agent for the British and Foreign Bible Society . He wrote home to his friends as follows : - - 66 The Battle of Junin . 49 ' Having touched 48 Travels in Tropical Lands .
Halaman 51
... British farmer . The altitude was now rapidly getting higher and the temperature correspondingly lower . Terrific showers of hail obliged us now and again to turn our backs to the storm . When within a few miles of Cerro , we stopped to ...
... British farmer . The altitude was now rapidly getting higher and the temperature correspondingly lower . Terrific showers of hail obliged us now and again to turn our backs to the storm . When within a few miles of Cerro , we stopped to ...
Edisi yang lain - Lihat semua
In Tropical Lands: Recent Travels to the Sources of the Amazon, the West ... Arthur Sinclair Pratinjau tidak tersedia - 2022 |
Istilah dan frasa umum
Aberdeen ABERDEEN PHILOSOPHICAL SOCIETY abundant acres Aden admirably altitude Amaryllid Amazon amongst balsa Barbadoes beautiful better Botanical British cacao called Cerro de Pasco Ceylon Chanchamayo chief chiefly Chilians Chimbote Chinese Cholo Chunchos cinchona climate cocoa coffee Colombo colony colour coolies Cordilleras creepers cultivated curious Davie European evergreen evergreen shrub favour feet above sea fruit garden growing Hacket height herbaceous Inca India indigenous to Peru industry interesting island jungle Junin Kandy King labour ladies leaves Lima looked luxuriant marvellous Matucana miles moist morning mountain mules native negro never night once orchids palm Pampa Perené Perené valley perfect Peru Peruvian Pizarro plant plantains planters poor Port of Spain pretty priest railway rich river scene sea level seems seen shrub Singalese soil sugar supply Tarma traveller trees Trinidad TROPICAL LANDS Truxillo varieties vegetation village yellow flowers
Bagian yang populer
Halaman 153 - Three-score and ten years,' the Psalmist's limit, which probably was often in Oliver's thoughts and in those of others there, might have been anticipated for him : Ten Years more of Life ; which, we may compute, would have given another History to all the Centuries of England. But it was not to be so, it was to be otherwise. Oliver's health, as we might observe, was but uncertain in late times ; often ' indisposed
Halaman 147 - The rush for land was only paralleled by the movement towards the mines of California and Australia, but with this painful difference, that the enthusiasts in Ceylon, instead of hurrying to disinter, were hurrying to bury their gold.
Halaman 156 - For it is written in the law of Moses, Thou shalt not muzzle the mouth of the ox that treadeth out the corn.
Halaman 64 - We were feverish, had intense headaches, and were unable to satisfy our desire for air, except by breathing with open mouths. This naturally parched the throat, and produced a craving for drink, which we were unable to satisfy, — partly from the difficulty in obtaining it, and partly from trouble in swallowing it.
Halaman 61 - Ill fares the land, to hastening ills a prey, Where wealth accumulates, and men decay: Princes and lords may flourish, or may fade ; A breath can make them, as a breath has made: But a bold peasantry, their country's pride, When once destroyed, can never be supplied.
Halaman 86 - Huertas de oro) were often described by actual eye-witnesses — Cieza de Leon, Sarmiento, Garcilaso, and other early historians of the Conquest. They were found beneath the Temple of the Sun at Cuzco, in Caxamarca, and in the pleasant valley of Yucay, a favourite residence of the monarch's family. Where the golden Huertas were not below ground, living plants grew by the side of the artificial ones, among the latter, tall plants and ears of maize (mazorcas) are mentioned as particularly well executed....
Halaman 146 - The Governor and the Council," says Sir Emerson, "the military, the judges, the clergy, and one-half the civil servants penetrated the hills and became purchasers of Crown lands. The East India Company's officers crowded to Ceylon to invest their savings, and capitalists from England arrived by every packet.
Halaman 86 - ... seemed as if these illusive and baseless visions were cherished as consolations in present sufferings. I asked the lad — " Since you and your parents believe so firmly in the existence of this garden, are not you sometimes tempted in your necessities to dig in search of treasures so close at hand ?" The boy's answer was so simple, and expressed so fully the quiet resignation characteristic of the aboriginal inhabitants of the country, that I noted it in Spanish in my journal. " Such a desire...
Halaman 64 - ... difficulty in obtaining it, and partly from trouble in swallowing it. When we got enough, we could only sip, and not to save our lives could we have taken a quarter of a pint at a draught. Before a mouthful was down, we were obliged to breathe and gasp again, until our throats were as dry as ever. Besides having our normal rate of breathing largely accelerated, we found it impossible to sustain life without every now and then giving spasmodic gulps, just like fishes when taken out of water. Of...