Fifteen Months' Pilgrimage Through Untrodden Tracts of Khuzistan and Persia, in a Journey from India to England, Volym 1 |
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Sida 1
... ; but what it want- ed in luxury it seemed to supply in novelty and romance . Buggalas are large boats averaging from one to two hundred tons burthen ; they VOL . I. B 2 A BUGGALA . have high sterns and pointed prows.
... ; but what it want- ed in luxury it seemed to supply in novelty and romance . Buggalas are large boats averaging from one to two hundred tons burthen ; they VOL . I. B 2 A BUGGALA . have high sterns and pointed prows.
Sida 2
... hundred and fifty rupees , was manned by about forty or fifty natives of Grane , or Koete , on the western side of the Persian Gulph , and commanded by a handsome Nacquodah in the prime of manhood . The sailors acknowledged a kind of ...
... hundred and fifty rupees , was manned by about forty or fifty natives of Grane , or Koete , on the western side of the Persian Gulph , and commanded by a handsome Nacquodah in the prime of manhood . The sailors acknowledged a kind of ...
Sida 19
... hundred families . I was informed that the Arabs had only been in possession of the place about one hundred and fifty years , and that previously to that period it was occupied by Englishmen and their forces , who received or conquered ...
... hundred families . I was informed that the Arabs had only been in possession of the place about one hundred and fifty years , and that previously to that period it was occupied by Englishmen and their forces , who received or conquered ...
Sida 19
... hundred families . I was informed that the Arabs had only been in possession of the place about one hundred and fifty years , and that previously to that period it was occupied by Englishmen and their forces , who received or conquered ...
... hundred families . I was informed that the Arabs had only been in possession of the place about one hundred and fifty years , and that previously to that period it was occupied by Englishmen and their forces , who received or conquered ...
Sida 20
... Hundreds followed me to the shore , gazing at every part of my dress with the utmost as- tonishment . This arose , I understood , from my having been almost the only European who has visited the place for many years . A DISPUTE . 21 6th ...
... Hundreds followed me to the shore , gazing at every part of my dress with the utmost as- tonishment . This arose , I understood , from my having been almost the only European who has visited the place for many years . A DISPUTE . 21 6th ...
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Fifteen Months' Pilgrimage Through Untrodden Tracts of Khuzistan and Persia ... Ingen förhandsgranskning - 2020 |
Fifteen Months' Pilgrimage Through Untrodden Tracts of Khuzistan and Persia ... Joachim Hayward Stocqueler Ingen förhandsgranskning - 2019 |
Vanliga ord och fraser
Abbas Meerza Ahwaz Ali Pacha appeared Arabs Ararat armed Armenian Arzeroum Asia Minor Augea Bagdad Balool banks Bayazeed Bebuhan Begler Beg boat British resident Buctiarian buggala Bushire Bussorah Captain caravan caravanserai Chab Chabeans cloth costume Daoud date trees Dere Mullah dressed English Euphrates European furnished garden gomruck horses houses hundred Imaum India inhabitants Isfahan Joseph Wolff journey Julfa Karoon Khan Khuzistan Koete Koordish Koords Kuzzeem latter Mahummarah Major Taylor Meer ment miles Mobader morning motesellim of Bussorah mountains of Buctiari Mullah Muscat nacquodah night numerous officer Pacha party passed Persian Gulph Pharseigh piastres pistols plague plain possess quarter racter reached rendered RETREAT river route Russian sent sheikh shore soon sorah Tabreez tents thousand Tigris Tigris and Euphrates tion tomauns town trackers travellers Trebisond tribes Turkish Turks vessel village voyage whole wild Zeitoon Zobeirs
Populära avsnitt
Sida 115 - And it came to pass at the end of forty days, that Noah opened the window of the ark which he had made: and he sent forth a raven, which went forth to and fro, until the waters were dried up from off the earth.
Sida 114 - A window shalt thou make to the ark, and in a cubit shall thou finish it above; and the door of the ark shalt thou set in the side thereof; with lower, second, and third stories shalt thou make it.
Sida 103 - Aire, and over every living thing that mooveth upon the Earth. And when the Sea had, as it were, rebelled against rebellious Man, so that all in whose nostrils was the breath of life, and all that was in the dry Land died, yet then did it all that time indure the yoke of Man, in that first of ships the Arke of Noah...
Sida 113 - Of the two separate peaks, called Little and Great Ararat, which are separated by a chasm about seven miles in width, Sir Robert thus speaks ; — ' These inaccessible summits have never been trodden by the foot of man, since the days of Noah...
Sida 59 - ... the antiquities of which she explored with unwearied zeal, and the historical dignity of which she has vindicated in her longest poem. From 1812 to 1815 inclusive, she passed much time at Windsor and its neighbourhood, and formed an intimate acquaintance with all the recesses of its forest. " She knew each lane, and every alley green, Dingle or bushy dell of those old woods, And every bosky bower from side to side.
Sida 129 - What should it be, that thus their faith can bind? The power of Thought — the magic of the Mind! Linked with success, assumed and kept with skill, is That moulds another's weakness to its will; Wields with their hands, but, still to these unknown, Makes even their mightiest deeds appear his own.
Sida 60 - Not vainly did the early Persian make His altar the high places, and the peak Of earth, o'ergazing mountains...
Sida xii - Buggales are large boats. averaging from one to two hundred tons burthen; they have high sterns and pointed prows, one large cabin on a somewhat inclined plane, galleries and stern windows; they usually carry two large latteen sails, and occasionally a jib; are generally built at Cochin and other places on the Malabar coast, and are employed by the Arab and Hindoo merchants on the trade between Arabia, Persia, and the Indian coast.
Sida 58 - To use the language of an elegant modern writer,* " they knew the particular projection of a rock, and the tree of unusual appearance which admonished them to turn now to the right, and now * Godwin. ' • ' to the left; so they were nothing more at a loss than a town-bred man among the streets of the city in which he was born.
Sida 115 - Here we have mountains specified as the place of its haven, not the mountain, as denoting a single summit. Therefore as the holy ship could not rest on both peaks, the...