The World Here and There: Or, Notes of TravellersCharles Dickens G. P. Putnam, 1852 - 231 pages |
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... SOUTH AMERICAN SCRAPS : -- THE PAMPAS INDIANS , 185 AN ADVENTURE WITH A LIZARD , 195 THE SIERRA DE ST . CATHERINA , 197 THE JEWS IN CHINA , · THE ART OF CATCHING ELEPHANTS , 202 215 THE WORLD HERE AND THERE . T % Shart Cats.
... SOUTH AMERICAN SCRAPS : -- THE PAMPAS INDIANS , 185 AN ADVENTURE WITH A LIZARD , 195 THE SIERRA DE ST . CATHERINA , 197 THE JEWS IN CHINA , · THE ART OF CATCHING ELEPHANTS , 202 215 THE WORLD HERE AND THERE . T % Shart Cats.
Page 116
... elephants were expected to march in procession through the place , decked out in all sorts of finery , and bearing the casket and relic ; but it was a weari- some spectacle , and I was heartily glad to find myself once more on my pony ...
... elephants were expected to march in procession through the place , decked out in all sorts of finery , and bearing the casket and relic ; but it was a weari- some spectacle , and I was heartily glad to find myself once more on my pony ...
Page 214
... the public , who , at their ordinary rate , might have come to abandon this business in forty years , after eliminating fifty pounds of blue book ? THE The Art of Catching Elephants . HE elephant is 214 THE WORLD HERE AND THERE : OR ,
... the public , who , at their ordinary rate , might have come to abandon this business in forty years , after eliminating fifty pounds of blue book ? THE The Art of Catching Elephants . HE elephant is 214 THE WORLD HERE AND THERE : OR ,
Page 215
Or, Notes of Travellers Charles Dickens. THE The Art of Catching Elephants . HE elephant is associated with our earliest recollections of school - boyhood . Well do I remember the huge black pic- ture of the unwieldy animal in Mavor's ...
Or, Notes of Travellers Charles Dickens. THE The Art of Catching Elephants . HE elephant is associated with our earliest recollections of school - boyhood . Well do I remember the huge black pic- ture of the unwieldy animal in Mavor's ...
Page 216
... elephants in the service of the Govern- ment . These huge animals were generally employed in the Commissariat timber - yard , or the Civil Engineer's department , either in removing and stowing logs and planks , or in rolling about ...
... elephants in the service of the Govern- ment . These huge animals were generally employed in the Commissariat timber - yard , or the Civil Engineer's department , either in removing and stowing logs and planks , or in rolling about ...
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The World Here and There: Or, Notes of Travellers - Primary Source Edition Charles Dickens No preview available - 2013 |
Common terms and phrases
Ahmed Beg amused animals appeared Aripo beautiful Bimbasha boats called canal Canton Captain carpet-bag Ceylon China Chinese Cloth coast colour crowd Davis Straits divers dress elephants entered European eyes Father Gozani feet fire flowers gilt Government Greenland horses huge hundred island Isthmus Japan Japanese Jasenica Jews jungle Jusuf Kai-foung-fou Kraal ladies land leave living London looked Melville Island Mikado miles morning Mosque mountains Nagasaki native neighbourhood night oysters Pampas Pampas Indians pareo Parry party passed pearls Pelusium Pentateuch Phantom Ship Pole present reached residence river round sail scarcely scene seemed shore side Sir James Ross Spitzbergen Staniza stones Strait streets synagogue Tahiti Tandil temple Teskera thousand tion told town travellers trees Turk vessel village Vitriol walked walls Wellclose Square whilst whole wild young Ziogoon
Popular passages
Page 8 - Nobody, however, who has paid any attention to the peculiar features of our present era, will doubt for a moment that we are living at a period of most wonderful transition, which tends rapidly to accomplish that great end to which, indeed, all history points, the realization of the Unity of Mankind!
Page 8 - ... placed within the reach of everybody ; thought is communicated with the rapidity and even by the power of lightning.
Page 18 - ... technicalities of the Parisian cuisine. Then, vessels were coming in day after day, to lie deserted and useless at their anchorage. Now scarce a day passed, but some cluster of sails, bound outward through the Golden Gate, took their way to all the corners of the Pacific. Like the magic seed of the Indian juggler, which grew, blossomed and bore fruit before the eyes of his spectators, San Francisco seemed to have accomplished in a day the growth of half a century.
Page 15 - Malays armed with their everlasting creeses and others in whose embrowned and bearded visages it was impossible to recognize any especial nationality. We came at last into the plaza, now dignified by the name of Portsmouth Square. It lies on the slant side of the hill, and from a high pole in front of a long one-story adobe building used as the Custom House, the American flag was flying. On the lower side stood the Parker House — an ordinary frame house of about sixty feet front — and towards...
Page 19 - Pasquale was reputed to be among the millionaires of the place, with an income of $50,000 monthly. A citizen of San Francisco died insolvent to the amount of $41,000 the previous Autumn. His administrators were delayed in settling his affairs, and his real estate advanced so rapidly in value meantime, that after his debts were paid his heirs had a yearly income of $40,000.
Page 22 - steward !' from all parts of the room — the word ' waiter' is not considered sufficiently respectful, seeing that the waiter may have been a lawyer or a merchant's clerk a few months before.
Page 208 - Chan-Kiao ; that is to say, chief of the synagogue, who never approaches ;t but with the most profound respect. "There were thirteen tabernacles placed upon tables, each of which was surrounded by small curtains. The sacred Kim of Moses {the Pentateuch) was shut up in each of these tabernacles, twelve of which represented the Twelve Tribes of Israel ; and the thirteenth, Moses. The books were written on long pieces of parchment, and folded up on rollers. I obtained leave from the chief of the synagogue...
Page 20 - Walking through the town the next day, I was quite amazed to find a dozen persons busily employed in the street before the United States Hotel, digging up the earth with knives and crumbling it in their hands. They were actual gold-hunters, who obtained in this way about $5 a day.
Page 15 - On every side stood buildings of all kinds, begun or half-finished, and the greater part of them mere canvas sheds, open in front, and covered with all kinds of signs, in all languages. Great quantities of goods were piled up in the open air, for want of a place to store them. The streets were full of people, hurrying to and fro, and of as diverse and bizarre a character as the houses...
Page 17 - ... any path of ambition, into shapes which it never before imagined. As in the turn of the dissolving views, there is a period when it wears neither the old nor the new phase, but the vanishing images of the one and the growing perceptions of the other are blended in painful and misty confusion. One knows not whether he is awake or in some wonderful dream. Never have I had so much difficulty in establishing, satisfactorily to my own senses, the reality of what I saw and heard.