Notes extracted from a private journal written during a tour through a part of Malabar and among the NeilgherriesAmerican Mission Press, 1834 - 138 pages |
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Page 67
... effect . It is indeed a noble building , and adds great beauty to the place ; -the effect of which is rather diminished by the meanness of some of the offices , and adjoining cottages . The gardens are not extensive , nor have they been ...
... effect . It is indeed a noble building , and adds great beauty to the place ; -the effect of which is rather diminished by the meanness of some of the offices , and adjoining cottages . The gardens are not extensive , nor have they been ...
Page 68
... effect has been produced . But this liberal minded man , never fails in displaying great good sense , and the most refined taste in all his under- takings . The healthiness and surprising effects of the cli- mate on deranged ...
... effect has been produced . But this liberal minded man , never fails in displaying great good sense , and the most refined taste in all his under- takings . The healthiness and surprising effects of the cli- mate on deranged ...
Page 70
... effects of the climate of Ootakamund in the cold sea- son , they are equally wrong in estimating the de- gree of temperature requisite to restore their bro- ken health during the remainder of the year ; and many who visit the Neilgherry ...
... effects of the climate of Ootakamund in the cold sea- son , they are equally wrong in estimating the de- gree of temperature requisite to restore their bro- ken health during the remainder of the year ; and many who visit the Neilgherry ...
Page 71
... effect will be in- sufficient . There are , of course , complaints for which these lofty hills would prove inimical , and a rapid change destruction . As a melancholy illus- tration of this remark , I need only mention the fate of my ...
... effect will be in- sufficient . There are , of course , complaints for which these lofty hills would prove inimical , and a rapid change destruction . As a melancholy illus- tration of this remark , I need only mention the fate of my ...
Page 72
... effect is absolutely scouted by peo- ple who are really well informed . Poor Moorcroft , in his perilous journey to Thibet , complained sadly of oppression at the heart , a fulness and giddiness in the head , and in one instance he ...
... effect is absolutely scouted by peo- ple who are really well informed . Poor Moorcroft , in his perilous journey to Thibet , complained sadly of oppression at the heart , a fulness and giddiness in the head , and in one instance he ...
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Notes Extracted from a Private Journal Written During a Tour Through a Part ... Robert Mignan No preview available - 2017 |
Common terms and phrases
49 Clear 55 Hazy 62 Cloudy appearance ascent Bazar beautiful boat Bombay Army botanist breeze Bunga Calicut Calm Cannanore Choultry Clear morning Clear night climate coast Coimbatoor Colonel command coolies copses Cross a Nullah Dark heavy clouds distance Drizzling rain elevation Fair ferry forest Frost Ghat Ghauts Grenadiers halting place Heavy rain Height of Thermo HENRY PETRIE India jungle Kota-puramba Kotagherry Lieutenant Mignan Light floating clouds lofty low country Madras Malabar Malabar Coast Mangalore Manontoddy meter miles month musquito Mysore nanore natives Neilgherry Hills Neilgherry mountains Ootakamund Overcast Parsee pass Periah plants procurable Public Bungalow Ralia ravines Regiment Remarks river road rock rupees scenery Serene morning Seringapatam shore showers slight rain soil Southwest station Sultaun's Battery summit tain teak Tellicherry temperature thermometer Thick fog thousand Threatening rain tion Tippoo travellers trees valleys vegetation village weather wild wind wood Wynaud
Popular passages
Page 11 - Almighty's form Glasses itself in tempests; in all time Calm or convulsed — in breeze, or gale, or storm, Icing the pole, or in the torrid clime Dark-heaving; boundless, endless, and sublime — The image of Eternity — the throne Of the Invisible; even from out thy slime The monsters of the deep are made; each zone Obeys thee; thou goest forth, dread, fathomless, alone.
Page 105 - The tear forgot as soon as shed, The sunshine of the breast: Theirs buxom health, of rosy hue, Wild wit, invention ever new, And lively cheer, of vigour born, The thoughtless day, the easy night, The spirits pure, the slumbers light That fly th
Page 57 - When we came up to the rock, which was standing where the water was scarcely knee-deep, we found a channel behind it, towards the deeper water, formed in the earth, about fifteen rods in length. It was serpentine in its form, and was sunk from two to three feet below the common level of the bottom on its borders. In the front of the rock the earth was pushed up in a heap, so as to rise above the water, declining, however, at the distance of a few inches, obliquely and pretty rapidly. Not far...
Page 53 - As make the angels weep." 3. . Far on the solitary shore he sleeps. Stanza v. line 2. «. .It was not always the custom of the Greeks to bunt their dead ; the greater Ajax in particular was interred e,ntire. Almost all the chiefs became gods after their decease, and he was indeed neglected, who had...
Page 72 - I've seen around me fall, Like leaves in wintry weather; I feel like one, Who treads alone Some banquet-hall deserted, Whose lights are fled, Whose garlands dead, And all but he departed!
Page 129 - These labours, indeed, are hard, compared with the tasks that are imposed upon females in civilised society ; but they are no more than their fair share, under every consideration and due allowance, of the hardships attendant on savage life.
Page 96 - ... half of the body of one that is sucking, it will not desist and attempt to fly away, but continue to suck for hours, the blood flowing from where it was severed in two. It is said that they have succeeded in killing animals, nor does this seem at all wonderful, when their virulent nature is known. Night and day they are equally annoying : it is in vain to go to bed at any prescribed hour, for no sleep can possibly be obtained, unless we are completely...
Page 24 - Emerson tells us that the situation of women is in no degree removed from the classification originally made, by which a man's " wife, and his slave, his maid-servant, his ox and his ass," are equally defended from the covetousness of his neighbour.
Page 60 - ... proceeded on to a kind of break between two peaks. The last half mile was generally over snow, and both my brother and I felt completely debilitated, and were inclined to return more than once ; we were affected with severe headaches and pains in the ears. The highest vegetation we saw, was a plant with leaves like sage, but without smell, and brown from the dryness of the atmosphere. It grows to the height of 17,000 feet, beyond which elevation we found no soil.
Page 78 - ... save those which he carries with him, and no companions but his thoughts. But these are sufficient, and they spring up with every breath, and at every turning : his very loneliness is sublimity ; his only prospect beauty ; he reclines upon earth, whose every clod is a sepulchre of greatness, and he is canopied by a sky ' So cloudless, pure, and beautiful, That God alone is to be seeu in Heaven.