An Interesting Narrative of the Travels of James Bruce, Esq. Into Abyssinia, to Discover the Source of the Nile: Abridged from the Original WorkH.D. Symonds, Paternoster-Row., 1814 - 373 sidor |
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Sida 3
... still remaining , feems to be intended for that of Trajan , and the apotheofis of that emperor to be the fubject , the temple having been erected by Adrian to that prince , his benefactor and predeceffor . From Dugga he continued the ...
... still remaining , feems to be intended for that of Trajan , and the apotheofis of that emperor to be the fubject , the temple having been erected by Adrian to that prince , his benefactor and predeceffor . From Dugga he continued the ...
Sida 9
... Still he was fo confufed that he had not recollected he could fpeak to them in their own language , and it now only came into his mind , that by the gibberish , in imitation of Turkish , which the Arab had uttered to him while he was ...
... Still he was fo confufed that he had not recollected he could fpeak to them in their own language , and it now only came into his mind , that by the gibberish , in imitation of Turkish , which the Arab had uttered to him while he was ...
Sida 11
... still dying every day . The harbour of Bengazi being full of fish , Mr. Bruce's company caught a great quantity with a fmall net ; they likewife procured a multitude with the line , enough to have maintained a larger number of perfons ...
... still dying every day . The harbour of Bengazi being full of fish , Mr. Bruce's company caught a great quantity with a fmall net ; they likewife procured a multitude with the line , enough to have maintained a larger number of perfons ...
Sida 29
... Still it was not the profpect that pleased ; for the whole ground that was fown to the fandy afcent of the mountains , was but a narrow ftripe of three quar- ters of a mile broad , and the monntains themselves , which here began to have ...
... Still it was not the profpect that pleased ; for the whole ground that was fown to the fandy afcent of the mountains , was but a narrow ftripe of three quar- ters of a mile broad , and the monntains themselves , which here began to have ...
Sida 32
... Still Mr. Bruce thought the villages were beggarly , and the conftant groves of palm - trees fo perfectly verdant , did not compenfate for the penury of the fown land , the nar- rownefs of the valley , and barrenness of the mountains ...
... Still Mr. Bruce thought the villages were beggarly , and the conftant groves of palm - trees fo perfectly verdant , did not compenfate for the penury of the fown land , the nar- rownefs of the valley , and barrenness of the mountains ...
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An Interesting Narrative of the Travels of James Bruce, Esq. Into Abyssinia ... James Bruce,Samuel Shaw Obegränsad förhandsgranskning - 1790 |
An Interesting Narrative of the Travels of James Bruce, Esq. Into Abyssinia ... James Bruce Ingen förhandsgranskning - 2018 |
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Abyffinia againſt alfo anfwer Arabia Arabs army arrived Axum Ayto beafts becauſe befides Begemder Bengazi Bruce Cairo called Chriftian church coaft confequence confiderable confifted defert defire eaft Edom Egypt fafe Fafil faid fame fand fays fcarcely feemed feen fent fervants feven feveral fhall fhew fhips fhore fhort fhould fide filk fince firft firſt fituation fize flain fmall foldiers fome foon fouth ftand ftill ftone ftrangers fubject fuch fuffer fuppofed Gojam Gondar himſelf horfe horſe houfe houſe ifland itſelf Jidda journey king king's laft likewife Mafuah Mahomet Mecca miles moft morning moſt mountains Naybe neceffary night Nile obferved occafion Ozoro paffed perfon plain poffible prefent preferved prince Ptolemy Ras Michael reafon Red Sea reign river Sennaar Shekh ſmall Tecla temple thefe themſelves theſe thofe thoſe Tigré town trade traveller trees uſed veffel village weft whofe wind Yafous
Populära avsnitt
Sida 218 - And God said, Behold I have given you every herb bearing seed, which is upon the face of all the earth, and every tree, in the which is the fruit of a tree yielding seed ; to you it shall be for meat.
Sida 369 - ... did actually more than once reach us. Again they would retreat so as to be almost out of sight, their tops reaching to the very clouds. There the tops often separated from the bodies ; and these, once disjoined, dispersed in the air, and did not appear more.
Sida 320 - Dextrous, too, as the riders are, the elephant sometimes reaches them with his trunk, with which he dashes the horse against the ground, and then sets his feet upon him, till he tears him limb from limb with his proboscis ; *a great many hunters die this way.
Sida 218 - It is infamy for a man to go to market to buy any thing. He cannot carry water or bake bread ; but he must wash the clothes belonging to both sexes, and, in this function, the women cannot help him.
Sida 353 - The inside of her lip she had made black with antimony. Her ears reached down to her shoulders, and had the appearance of wings ; she had in each of them a large ring of gold, somewhat smaller than a man's little finger, and about five inches diameter.
Sida 221 - In the mean time, those within are very much elevated; love lights all its fires, and every thing is permitted with absolute freedom. There is no...
Sida 279 - I ran down the hill, towards the little island of green sods, which was about two hundred yards distant; the whole side of the hill was thick grown over with flowers, the large bulbous roots of which appearing above the surface of the ground, and their skins coming off on treading upon them, occasioned...
Sida 208 - Sierra occupied by the 3d division of infantry. — One division of French infantry arrived at the top of the ridge...
Sida 201 - ... of the heavens. Other countries are not like this, though this was never so bad as it is now. These wretches here are enemies to strangers; if they saw you alone in your own parlour, their first thought would be how to murder you ; though they knew they were to get nothing by it, they would murder you for mere mischief.
Sida 16 - Tyre seems to have been only a concealment of their knowledge of cochineal, as, had they depended upon the fish for their dye, if the whole city of Tyre applied to nothing else but fishing, they would not have coloured twenty yards of cloth in a year.