Guatemala: The Land of the QuetzalC. Scribner's sons, 1887 - 453 pages |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 29
Page 21
... cent of the whole population . The annual grant for the purposes of education was $ 50,000 . The Mosquito coast cuts from Nicaragua a large por- tion of her shore - line , precisely as British Honduras robs Guatemala of hers ; and this ...
... cent of the whole population . The annual grant for the purposes of education was $ 50,000 . The Mosquito coast cuts from Nicaragua a large por- tion of her shore - line , precisely as British Honduras robs Guatemala of hers ; and this ...
Page 33
... cents ) . The fine view from the fort can be seen in the illus- tration ; but as Frank and I stepped over the low wall and set up the camera to photograph it , we attracted the attention of the officer in charge , who at once ordered us ...
... cents ) . The fine view from the fort can be seen in the illus- tration ; but as Frank and I stepped over the low wall and set up the camera to photograph it , we attracted the attention of the officer in charge , who at once ordered us ...
Page 78
... cents ) a day , - quite equal here to the fee the law allows an intelligent juryman in the North . They cannot be sent beyond their district , nor made to carry more than four arrobas ( 100 lbs . ) . In many cases they carry six arrobas ...
... cents ) a day , - quite equal here to the fee the law allows an intelligent juryman in the North . They cannot be sent beyond their district , nor made to carry more than four arrobas ( 100 lbs . ) . In many cases they carry six arrobas ...
Page 102
... cents a bottle for all over this amount . All the product is brought to the public store , where it is tested at 50 ° ; and the retailers send in their written orders for the number of bottles they require . The estancas ( or drink ...
... cents a bottle for all over this amount . All the product is brought to the public store , where it is tested at 50 ° ; and the retailers send in their written orders for the number of bottles they require . The estancas ( or drink ...
Page 103
... cents , and also some good bananas . Our breakfast was very satisfactory , although eaten in a dirty house full of filthy children . At two we started on a good road for San Cristobal , where we arrived in an hour and a half . This ...
... cents , and also some good bananas . Our breakfast was very satisfactory , although eaten in a dirty house full of filthy children . At two we started on a good road for San Cristobal , where we arrived in an hour and a half . This ...
Other editions - View all
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
Page 394 - The whole country is divided into eighteen districts, and in all of them were so many and such stately stone buildings that it was amazing, and the greatest wonder is, that having no use of any metal, they were able to raise such structures, which seem to have been temples, for their houses were always of timber and thatched.
Page 405 - Spanish America; or a Descriptive, Historical, and Geographical Account of the Dominions of Spain, in the Western Hemisphere...
Page 392 - I made several trials of it, and found it most efficacious in turning a large column of the ants; a little of it sprinkled across one of their paths in dry weather has a most surprising effect: as soon as one of the ants touches the white powder it commences to run about wildly, and to attack any other ant it comes across. In a couple of hours round balls of the ants will be...
Page 442 - THE AMERICA'S CUP. HOW IT WAS WON BY THE YACHT AMERICA IN 1851, AND HOW IT HAS BEEN SINCE DEFENDED. By CAPT. ROLAND F. COFFIN, Author of "Sailors' Yarns," "Archibald the Cat," "How Old Wiggins Wore Ship,
Page 391 - The whole formicarium was disorganised. Big fellows came stalking up from the cavernous regions below, only to descend again in the utmost perplexity. Next day I found them busily employed bringing up the ant-food from the old burrows, and carrying it to a new one a few yards distant ; and here I first noticed a wonderful instance of their reasoning powers.
Page 444 - ... finally, a condensation of one or more of the most important narratives of recent travel, accompanied with illustrations of the scenery, architecture, and life of the races, drawn only from the most authentic sources.
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...
Page 368 - Thursday, preceded by sounds like the rolling of heavy artillery over pavements, and like distant thunder. The people were a little alarmed in consequence of this phenomenon, but it did not prevent them from meeting in the churches to celebrate the solemnities of the day. On Saturday all was quiet, and confidence was restored. The people of the neighborhood assembled as usual to celebrate the Passover.
Page 407 - Cockburn (John). A Journey over Land from the Gulf of Honduras to the Great South Sea. Performed by John Cockburn and Five other Englishmen, who were taken by a Spanish Guarda Costa in the John and Jane...