Humboldt's travels and discoveries in South AmericaJ.W. Parker, 1840 - 278 pages |
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Page 10
... sometimes ascend the river in the night , and frighten the bathers by spouting water . " The port of Cumana is described as a road capable of receiving all the navies of Europe ; and the whole of the Gulf of Cariaco affords excellent ...
... sometimes ascend the river in the night , and frighten the bathers by spouting water . " The port of Cumana is described as a road capable of receiving all the navies of Europe ; and the whole of the Gulf of Cariaco affords excellent ...
Page 16
... sometimes occasioned by the negligence of the wandering Indians ; and they are sometimes the result of design , the woods being burnt for the sake of improving the pasturage . In the western part of North America a vast extent of ...
... sometimes occasioned by the negligence of the wandering Indians ; and they are sometimes the result of design , the woods being burnt for the sake of improving the pasturage . In the western part of North America a vast extent of ...
Page 28
... sometimes wading through the water , at others , walking in a strip of muddy soil between the torrent and a wall of rock . The mouth of the cavern was of vast dimensions , being about eighty- five feet in width , and nearly eighty in ...
... sometimes wading through the water , at others , walking in a strip of muddy soil between the torrent and a wall of rock . The mouth of the cavern was of vast dimensions , being about eighty- five feet in width , and nearly eighty in ...
Page 33
... sometimes assumed a malignant character . The situation of the place accounts for its unhealthiness ; it lies low , the heat and moisture are excessive , and the stagnant marshes generated in the surrounding district during the rainy ...
... sometimes assumed a malignant character . The situation of the place accounts for its unhealthiness ; it lies low , the heat and moisture are excessive , and the stagnant marshes generated in the surrounding district during the rainy ...
Page 38
... the heavens . This mist sometimes disappeared in the night for a time , when masses of brilliantly white clouds formed in the zenith , once so transparent that even SINGULAR PHENOMENA . 39 the smaller stars were seen through.
... the heavens . This mist sometimes disappeared in the night for a time , when masses of brilliantly white clouds formed in the zenith , once so transparent that even SINGULAR PHENOMENA . 39 the smaller stars were seen through.
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Common terms and phrases
Amazon Andalusia animals appeared Apure Aragua Atabapo Atures banks beautiful birds boat Bonpland Calabozo canoe Caraccas Caripe Cassiquiare cataracts cavern climate coast colour continued Cordilleras covered crocodiles cultivated Cumana Cumanacoa descended distance earth earthquake elevated Europe feet fish forests granite ground Guacharo Guayra gymnoti heat height inches Indians inhabitants insects island jaguar La Guayra lake land leagues Llanos Maypures Mexico miles mission missionary monkeys monks moschetoes mountains mouth mules natives nature nearly neighbouring night noise observed Orinoco palm-trees palms Pararuma passed plains plants Quito reached regions remarkable resembling Rio Negro rise river rocks San Fernando savannahs says Humboldt scarcely shore Silla soil South America Spanish species spot stream summit surface surrounded thousand tion toises torrid zone town travellers trees tribes trunks Turmero Uruana valley vapour vast vegetation village wind yellow fever
Popular passages
Page 115 - These yellowish and livid eels, resembling large aquatic serpents, swim on the surface of the water, and crowd under the bellies of the horses and mules. A contest between animals of so different an organization presents a very striking spectacle.
Page 95 - American oak, and the fruit, from the kernel of which, first dried in the sun, the butter is prepared by boiling the kernel in water, has somewhat the appearance of a Spanish olive. The kernel is enveloped in a sweet pulp, under a thin green rind ; and the butter produced from it, besides the advantage of its keeping the whole year without salt, is whiter, firmer, and to my palate of a richer flavour than the best butter I ever tasted made of cow's milk.
Page 143 - They attach great importance to certain forms of the body ; and a mother would be accused of culpable indifference toward her children, if she did not employ artificial means, to shape the calf of the leg after the fashion of the country. As none of our Indians of Apure understood the Caribbee language, we could obtain no information from the Cacique of Panama respecting the encampments, that are made at this season in several islands of the Oroonoko for collecting turtles
Page 116 - It is natural that the effect felt by the horses should be more powerful than that produced upon man by the touch of the same fish at only one of his extremities. The horses are probably not killed, but only stunned. They are drowned from the impossibility of rising amid the prolonged struggle between the other horses and the eels. We...
Page 96 - Its branches appear dead and dried, but when the trunk is pierced, there flows from it a sweet and nourishing milk. It is at the rising of the sun, that this vegetable fountain is most abundant. The blacks and natives are then seen hastening from all quarters, furnished with large bowls to receive the milk, which grows yellow, and thickens at its surface.
Page 211 - It was the rainy season, and the night was profoundly dark. Forests till then believed to be impenetrable separated the mission of Javita from that of San Fernando, which was twenty-five leagues distant in a straight line.
Page 74 - Nine-tenths of the fine town of Caraccas were entirely destroyed. The walls of the houses that were not thrown down, as those of the street San Juan, near the Capuchin Hospital, were cracked in such a manner that it was impossible to run the risk of inhabiting them.
Page 211 - She succeeded by the help of her teeth in breaking them entirely ; disappeared during the night; and at the fourth rising sun was seen at the mission of San Fernando, hovering around the hut where her children were confined. ' What that woman performed,' added the missionary who gave us this sad narrative, ' the most robust Indian would not have ventured to undertake.
Page 74 - TH».CHTT. so great in the churches, that nearly three or four thousand persons were crushed by the fall of their vaulted roofs. The explosion was stronger towards the north, in that part of the town situate nearest the mountain of Avila, and the Silla.
Page 157 - These are so many voices proclaiming to us, that all nature breathes ; and that, under a thousand different forms, life is diffused throughout the cracked and dusty soil, as well as in the bosom of the waters, and in the air that circulates around us.