Guatemala: The Land of the QuetzalC. Scribner's sons, 1887 - 453 pages |
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Page vi
... soon the individuality of a country is lost when once the tide of foreign travel is turned through its towns or its by - ways ; and when the ship - railway of Eads crosses the Isthmus of Tehuantepec , when the Northern Railroad extends ...
... soon the individuality of a country is lost when once the tide of foreign travel is turned through its towns or its by - ways ; and when the ship - railway of Eads crosses the Isthmus of Tehuantepec , when the Northern Railroad extends ...
Page 26
... Soon the white sails drop out from the foliage , the canoes are seen rapidly approaching , and the chatter of Caribs , both men and women , banishes all day - dreams . The " Progreso , " once a Buzzard Bay racer , sails rapidly out and ...
... Soon the white sails drop out from the foliage , the canoes are seen rapidly approaching , and the chatter of Caribs , both men and women , banishes all day - dreams . The " Progreso , " once a Buzzard Bay racer , sails rapidly out and ...
Page 35
... soon marked it for a Spanish post ; but the buccaneers were too powerful , and before their advance the port of entry was moved far up the Rio Dulce to Izabal , on the lake of that name , the fort of San Felipe blocking the way to these ...
... soon marked it for a Spanish post ; but the buccaneers were too powerful , and before their advance the port of entry was moved far up the Rio Dulce to Izabal , on the lake of that name , the fort of San Felipe blocking the way to these ...
Page 45
... soon germinate , and float about with expanded cotyledons until caught on some shoal , or at the bank , where they take root . Not once all day did we see a place to land ; indeed , until we had ascended the river several miles there ...
... soon germinate , and float about with expanded cotyledons until caught on some shoal , or at the bank , where they take root . Not once all day did we see a place to land ; indeed , until we had ascended the river several miles there ...
Page 47
... soon as a native . Female Iguanas . A mouth like a toad's , green , glittering eyes , a large pendulous dewlap , a row of lancet - shaped spines down the back , slender claws , and a long , pointed tail , certainly are not features to ...
... soon as a native . Female Iguanas . A mouth like a toad's , green , glittering eyes , a large pendulous dewlap , a row of lancet - shaped spines down the back , slender claws , and a long , pointed tail , certainly are not features to ...
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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
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.
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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.
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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...
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.
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