Guatemala: The Land of the QuetzalC. Scribner's sons, 1887 - 453 pages |
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Page vii
... negatives , the ink drawings have been made from photographic prints with care . There are no fancy sketches . W. T. B. BOSTON , June 16 , 1887 . From an Ancient Manuscript . + CONTENTS . PAGE I. THE KINGDOM OF GUATEMALA · PREFACE . vii.
... negatives , the ink drawings have been made from photographic prints with care . There are no fancy sketches . W. T. B. BOSTON , June 16 , 1887 . From an Ancient Manuscript . + CONTENTS . PAGE I. THE KINGDOM OF GUATEMALA · PREFACE . vii.
Page xii
... ancient Manuscript ) LUCIANO CALLETANO ( captain at Chocon ) BARRACK POINT , LIVINGSTON ENTRANCE TO THE RIO DULCE FEMALE IGUANAS BARBECUE AT BENITO SECTION OF VEJUCO DE AGUA . DRAGON ROCK , CHOCON . SAN GIL ( from the author's house at ...
... ancient Manuscript ) LUCIANO CALLETANO ( captain at Chocon ) BARRACK POINT , LIVINGSTON ENTRANCE TO THE RIO DULCE FEMALE IGUANAS BARBECUE AT BENITO SECTION OF VEJUCO DE AGUA . DRAGON ROCK , CHOCON . SAN GIL ( from the author's house at ...
Page xiv
... ANCIENT TEMPLE ( from an old Manuscript ) 245 INDIO SACRIFICING BLOOD FROM HIS TONGUE ( Kingsborough ) 246 IDEOGRAPHS 251 ANCIENT INCENSE - BURNER 251 STONE RING FOR BALL GAME ( at Chichen Itza ) . 257 A CARIB WOMAN 272 INDIAN WOMEN ...
... ANCIENT TEMPLE ( from an old Manuscript ) 245 INDIO SACRIFICING BLOOD FROM HIS TONGUE ( Kingsborough ) 246 IDEOGRAPHS 251 ANCIENT INCENSE - BURNER 251 STONE RING FOR BALL GAME ( at Chichen Itza ) . 257 A CARIB WOMAN 272 INDIAN WOMEN ...
Page xv
... ancient Manuscript ) . · 347 352 356 360 376 384 399 442 CENTRAL AMERICA LAGO DE ATITLAN . CENTRAL AMERICAN VOLCANOES LAGO DE ILOPANGO GUATEMALA MAPS . 6 154 377 403 End of Book GUATEMALA : THE LAND OF THE QUETZAL . THA CHAPTER ...
... ancient Manuscript ) . · 347 352 356 360 376 384 399 442 CENTRAL AMERICA LAGO DE ATITLAN . CENTRAL AMERICAN VOLCANOES LAGO DE ILOPANGO GUATEMALA MAPS . 6 154 377 403 End of Book GUATEMALA : THE LAND OF THE QUETZAL . THA CHAPTER ...
Page 1
... ancient kingdom , I may be pardoned if I call the attention of my readers briefly to the geography and history of all that country which once bore the name and is still closely allied with the interests of Guatemala . - - Central ...
... ancient kingdom , I may be pardoned if I call the attention of my readers briefly to the geography and history of all that country which once bore the name and is still closely allied with the interests of Guatemala . - - Central ...
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Common terms and phrases
Agua almuerzo Alta Verapaz Alvarado ancient Antigua Atitlan Atlantic Attalea cohune attractive bananas banks Barrios beautiful Belize Cakchiquels capital Caribs Central America Chiquimula Chixoy church climbed coast Coban coffee cohune colors comandante comfortable Cortez dark earthquakes Escuintla five forest Frank fruit Guatemala City Guatemaltecan Honduras horses hundred feet inches Indian Indios inhabitants Izabal Jefe jocotes ladino Lago Lago de Izabal lake land lava leagues Livingston mahogany Mexico miles morning mosquitoes mountains mozos mules Nicaragua night o'clock Pacaya Pacific palms Pansos passed plantains plants Plaza Polochic port posada Puerto Barrios Quezaltenango Quiché Quirigua rain republic Rio Chocon Rio Dulce river road rode roof ruins Salvador Santa Santiago Santo seemed seen señora shore side Sololà Spaniards Spanish steamer steep stone stream tortillas Totonicapan town trees Utatlan valley vegetable Verapaz volcanoes walls women
Popular passages
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Page 371 - The clocktower of the cathedral carried a great part of that edifice with it in its fall. The towers of the church of San Francisco crushed the episcopal oratory and part of the palace. The church of Santo Domingo was buried beneath its towers, and the college of the Assumption was entirely ruined. The...
Page 391 - ... dropping them over the slope, and rushing back immediately for more. They also brought out great numbers of dead ants that the fumes of the carbolic acid had killed. A few days afterwards, when I visited the locality again, I found both the old burrows and the new one entirely deserted, and I thought they had died off; but subsequent events convinced me that the survivors had only moved away to a greater distance. It was fully twelve months before my garden was again invaded. I had then a number...
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