In the Andamans and Nicobars: The Narrative of a Cruise in the Schooner "Terrapin", with Notices of the Islands, Their Fauna, Ethnology, EtcJ. Murray, 1903 - 373 pages |
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Page 27
... India — is carefully respected , and the Brahmin prisoners are nearly all employed as cooks . The majority of the convicts are from the Indian Peninsula , and are resident for life . Of the Burmese , however , the greater part are ...
... India — is carefully respected , and the Brahmin prisoners are nearly all employed as cooks . The majority of the convicts are from the Indian Peninsula , and are resident for life . Of the Burmese , however , the greater part are ...
Page 43
... Indian cows that were kept by the agent . The Nicobarese do not use milk , and a herd of cattle given to them when the settlement at Nankauri was abolished , are now roaming over Trinkat in a semi - wild state , very occasionally losing ...
... Indian cows that were kept by the agent . The Nicobarese do not use milk , and a herd of cattle given to them when the settlement at Nankauri was abolished , are now roaming over Trinkat in a semi - wild state , very occasionally losing ...
Page 50
... Indian Government . The headman was , for a Nicobarese , a Nicobarese , a very travelled individual , for he had spent a month in Calcutta , ten days in Penang , and various periods at Port Blair ; and as a result , had a really working ...
... Indian Government . The headman was , for a Nicobarese , a Nicobarese , a very travelled individual , for he had spent a month in Calcutta , ten days in Penang , and various periods at Port Blair ; and as a result , had a really working ...
Page 53
... manned by juvenile paddlers , he always , * " A century ago , all the natives of Kar Nicobar spoke the Portuguese of the Indian Eurasians . ” — Hamilton , Asiatic Researches , vol . ii . as he neared the schooner , took from his pocket.
... manned by juvenile paddlers , he always , * " A century ago , all the natives of Kar Nicobar spoke the Portuguese of the Indian Eurasians . ” — Hamilton , Asiatic Researches , vol . ii . as he neared the schooner , took from his pocket.
Page 74
... Agent , who is a native of India , came across from the harbour and brought the Port Register , in which we entered our arrival . These registers , bound in TANAMARA 75 heavy brown leather , stamped with the arms 74 TRINKAT.
... Agent , who is a native of India , came across from the harbour and brought the Port Register , in which we entered our arrival . These registers , bound in TANAMARA 75 heavy brown leather , stamped with the arms 74 TRINKAT.
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Common terms and phrases
aborigines amongst anchored Andaman and Nicobar andamanensis Andamanese Arakan Arakan Yoma Archipelago ashore bamboo banks Beach forest birds Blyth boat Bompoka Burmese canoe Captain ceremony Chaura Chinese cloth coast coco palms coconuts colour convict coral cotton dance Elephantiasis Elpanam fathoms fauna feast feet fish fruit Gurjan harbour headman hills houses Hume inches Indian inhabitants Interior Jarawas jungle Kachal Kamorta Kar Nicobar killed Kondul land latter Linn Little Andaman Little Nicobar mafai Malay Malayan mangroves megapode miles monkeys monsoon Mūs Nancowry Nankauri natives Nicobar Islands Nicobarese nicobarica night obtained Offandi Padouk palm leaves pandanus pigs Port Blair possess Pulo Milo rattan reef river round rowed Rutland Island sail schooner Settlement ship Shom Pen shore side species specimens Sumatra tamiluanas Tanamara Teressa Tilanchong trade trees Trinkat vessel village voyage wind women wood yards نے نے نے
Popular passages
Page 8 - Why are we weigh'd upon with heaviness, And utterly consumed with sharp distress, While all things else have rest from weariness? All things have rest: why should we toil alone, We only toil, who are the first of things, And make perpetual moan, Still from one sorrow to another thrown: Nor ever fold our wings, And cease from wanderings, Nor steep our brows in slumber's holy balm; Nor harken what the inner spirit sings, "There is no joy but calm!
Page 271 - I had long before this repented me of that roving course of life, but never with such concern as now. I did also call to mind the many miraculous acts of God's providence towards me in the whole course of my life, of which kind I believe few men have met with the like. For all these I returned thanks in a peculiar manner, and thus once more desired God's assistance, and composed my mind as well as I could in the hopes of it...
Page 239 - ... waists, or even a petticoat — there is a very peculiar testimony of regard, which is worthy of note. About nine or ten at night, when the family is supposed to be fast asleep within the...
Page 271 - The evening of this i8th day was very dismal. The sky looked very black, being covered with dark clouds ; the wind blew hard, and the seas ran high. The sea was already roaring in a white foam about us ; a dark night coming on, and no land in sight to shelter us, and our little ark in danger to be swallowed by every wave ; and what was worst of all, none of us thought ourselves prepared for another world.
Page 209 - In this Island they have no king nor chief, but live like beasts. And I tell you they go all naked, both men and women, and do not use the slightest covering of any kind.
Page 272 - Never did poor mariners on a lee-shore more earnestly long for the dawning light, than we did now. At length the day appeared ; but with such dark black clouds near the horizon, that the first glimpse of the dawn appeared thirty or forty degrees high, which was dreadful enough.
Page 138 - In the afternoon they came unto a land In which it seemed always afternoon. All round the coast the languid air did swoon, Breathing like one that hath a, weary dream.
Page iii - KLOSS, C. BODEN. In the Andamans and Nicobars. The narrative of a cruise In the schooner "Terrapin," with notices of the islands, their fauna, ethnology, etc.
Page 21 - Superintendent ; the Flag-Lieutenant of the Glasgow and a Colonel of Engineers a few paces behind, on left and right; the armed police between them, but a little nearer the Viceroy. The Superintendent turned aside, with Lord Mayo's leave, to give an order about the morning's programme, and the Viceroy stepped quickly forward before the rest to descend the stairs to the launch. The next moment the people in the rear heard a noise as of ' the rush of some animal ' from behind the loose stones : one...
Page 271 - I had been in many imminent dangers before now, some of which I have already related, but the worst of them all was but a play-game in comparison with this. I must confess that I was in great conflicts of mind at this time. Other dangers came not upon me with such a leisurely and dreadful solemnity. A sudden skirmish or engagement, or so, was nothing when one's blood was up, and pushed forwards with eager expectations.