Observations on Divers Passages of Scripture. Placing Many of Them in a Light Altogether New ... and More Amply Illustrating the Rest Than Has Been Yet Done, by Means of Circumstances Incidentally Mentioned in Books of Voyages and Travels Into the East: In Two Volumes. ...J. Johnson, 1797 |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 65
Page 2
... themselves as affronted , and indeed de- frauded , when this compliment is omitted . " Even in familiar vifits amongst inferior " people , you fhall feldom have them come " without bringing a flower or an orange , 46 66 or fome other ...
... themselves as affronted , and indeed de- frauded , when this compliment is omitted . " Even in familiar vifits amongst inferior " people , you fhall feldom have them come " without bringing a flower or an orange , 46 66 or fome other ...
Page 24
... themselves al- ways obliged graciously to accept every thing . that is brought , or even to diffemble their dif like ; they frequently reject the prefent , and refufe the favour fought . 66 66 The behaviour of an Aga in Egypt to Dr ...
... themselves al- ways obliged graciously to accept every thing . that is brought , or even to diffemble their dif like ; they frequently reject the prefent , and refufe the favour fought . 66 66 The behaviour of an Aga in Egypt to Dr ...
Page 28
... themselves , though perhaps it doth not contain the whole of what they meant . OBSERVATION XII . People that go into the prefence of the Great carry with them fome gift to make way for them , or fend it before them ; on the contrary ...
... themselves , though perhaps it doth not contain the whole of what they meant . OBSERVATION XII . People that go into the prefence of the Great carry with them fome gift to make way for them , or fend it before them ; on the contrary ...
Page 32
... themselves with the Jewish nation . If . 3. 6. and 4. 1. are to be explained after the fame manner . ] 5 Pitts , p . 66. Le Bruyn , Tom . 1. p . 422. Theve- not , p . 30 . * Part 1. p . 87 . Shaw's Shaw's account of the Arab compliment ...
... themselves with the Jewish nation . If . 3. 6. and 4. 1. are to be explained after the fame manner . ] 5 Pitts , p . 66. Le Bruyn , Tom . 1. p . 422. Theve- not , p . 30 . * Part 1. p . 87 . Shaw's Shaw's account of the Arab compliment ...
Page 39
... . OBSERVATION XVI . [ The nobleness of Eastern falutations con- fifts not merely in the attitudes into which 1 Let . 1. p . 17 . D 4 2 Let . 10. p . 78 , they # they put themselves , but in the expreffions they in the Holy - Land . 39.
... . OBSERVATION XVI . [ The nobleness of Eastern falutations con- fifts not merely in the attitudes into which 1 Let . 1. p . 17 . D 4 2 Let . 10. p . 78 , they # they put themselves , but in the expreffions they in the Holy - Land . 39.
Common terms and phrases
according Ægypt Ægyptian againſt Aleppo alfo alſo ancient appears Arabs becauſe Biſhop Chardin circumftance colour confequently confiderable cuſtom Damafcus defcribes defigned doth drefs Eaft Eaſt Eaſtern Egypt expreffion exprefs faid falutation fame fays feal feems fent fervants ferves fhall fhews fhould fhould feem fignifies filk filver fince firft firſt flaves fome fomething fometimes fpeaking ftill ftones fuch fufficient fuppofed Gefta himſelf honour horfes houſe Ifrael illuftrate imagine Jerufalem Jews Judæa kifs Kings laft leaſt Lett linen Lord Maillet manner means mentioned Mofes moft moſt muſt OBSERVATION occafion paffage paffed Perfian perfons Pococke prefent princes Prophet reafon refpect Ruffell Saladine ſay ſeems Shaw Sir John Chardin ſome ſpeaks ſtate ſuppoſe Syria tells thefe themſelves theſe thing thofe thoſe thought tion tranflated underſtand underſtood uſed vifit whofe William of Tyre wont word