Travels to Discover the Source of the Nile: In the Years 1768, 1769, 1770, 1771, 1772, & 1773, Volume 4 |
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Page 13
... side of the Nile , and on the low road by which he returned to Ibaba . Dermin , well - informed as to his motions , and per- fectly instructed in the situation of the country , in- stead of passing him , turned short upon his front ...
... side of the Nile , and on the low road by which he returned to Ibaba . Dermin , well - informed as to his motions , and per- fectly instructed in the situation of the country , in- stead of passing him , turned short upon his front ...
Page 19
... side , did not offer to break through , or molest the enemy that had sheltered themselves with- in . Theophilus , informed of this scruple of his sol- diers , immediately rode up to them , crying out , " That the church was defiled by ...
... side , did not offer to break through , or molest the enemy that had sheltered themselves with- in . Theophilus , informed of this scruple of his sol- diers , immediately rode up to them , crying out , " That the church was defiled by ...
Page 29
... side , and so form a spacious pavilion , which , at a dis- tance , appears like a tent , the tree serving for the pole in the middle of it , and the large top overshadowing it , so as to make a very picturesque appearance . Every tree ...
... side , and so form a spacious pavilion , which , at a dis- tance , appears like a tent , the tree serving for the pole in the middle of it , and the large top overshadowing it , so as to make a very picturesque appearance . Every tree ...
Page 32
... side of the Red Sea , but are of a soft , gritty , sandy stone , easily excavated and formed into different apart- ments . Into these , made generally in the steepest part of the mountain , do these savages retire to shun the rains ...
... side of the Red Sea , but are of a soft , gritty , sandy stone , easily excavated and formed into different apart- ments . Into these , made generally in the steepest part of the mountain , do these savages retire to shun the rains ...
Page 36
... side by active and powerful enemies , who consider them as a species of wild beasts , and hunt them precisely as they do the elephant and rhinoceros ; placed in a small territory , where they never are re- moved above 20 miles from ...
... side by active and powerful enemies , who consider them as a species of wild beasts , and hunt them precisely as they do the elephant and rhinoceros ; placed in a small territory , where they never are re- moved above 20 miles from ...
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Common terms and phrases
Abuna Abyssinia Achmet Adowa Agows Amhara appeared Arabia Arabs Arkeeko army arrived Axum Ayto Azage Azazo Bacuffa Baharnagash beasts Begemder Betwudet brother called church command Damot death Dixan Djawi encamped Enderta enemy Eshte Fasil fire Galla Georgis Gibberti Gojam Gondar governor of Tigre Gusho hand head Hezekias horse hyæna Ibaba immediately inhabitants Iteghe Janni Jidda Kasmati king king's kingdom Koscam l'Oul Lasta Mahomet Mahometans Mammo manner Mariam Barea Masuah Metical Metical Aga miles monks morning mountain murder Naybe never night Nile o'clock officers Oustas Ozoro Esther palace passed patakas person plain priests prince province queen Ras Michael reason Red Sea reign returned river says seemed seen Sennaar sent servants Shangalla shewed side soldiers soon Suhul Tacazze Taranta Tecla Haimanout teff tent thing throne Tigre tion town trees troops village violent Waragna Wechne Welleta Yasine Yasous
Popular passages
Page 462 - And God said, Behold, I have given you every herb bearing seed, which is upon the face of all the earth, and every tree, in the which is the fruit of a tree yielding seed ; to you it shall be for meat.
Page 391 - I said unto the fools, Deal not foolishly: and to the wicked, Lift not up the horn: 5 Lift not up your horn on high : speak not with a stiff neck.
Page 313 - He appears, by his modest and unaffected narration, to have described things as he saw them, to have copied nature from the life, and to have consulted his senses, not his imagination. He meets with no basilisks that destroy with their eyes; his crocodiles devour their prey without tears; and his cataracts fall from the rock without deafening the neighbouring inhabitants.
Page 462 - Be fruitful, and multiply, and replenish the earth. And the fear of you and the dread of you shall be upon every beast of the earth, and upon every fowl of the air...
Page 434 - Sierra occupied by the 3d division of infantry. — One division of French infantry arrived at the top of the ridge...
Page 464 - Saul caused roll to him a great stone, and ordered those that killed their oxen to cut their throats upon that stone. This was the only lawful way of killing animals for food ; the tying of the ox and throwing it upon the ground was not permitted as equivalent. The Israelites did probably in that case as the...
Page 467 - ... down his ribs, and so on to the buttock, ^cutting the skin wherever it hinders them commodiously to strip the poor animal bare. All the flesh on the buttocks is then cut off, and in solid square pieces, without bones, or much effusion of blood ; and the prodigious noise the animal makes is a signal for the company to sit down to table.
Page 391 - Mine eye also shall see my desire on mine enemies, and mine ears shall hear my desire of the wicked that rise up against me.
Page 361 - to be the great reservoir from whence arise most of the rivers that water this part of Abyssinia. A multitude of streams issue from the very summit in all directions; the springs boil out from the earth in large quantities, capable of turning a mill. They plough, sow, and reap here at all seasons ; and the husbandman must blame his own indolence, and not the soil, if he has not three harvests. We saw in one place people busy cutting down wheat ; immediately next to it others at the plough, and the...
Page 228 - I lay down, then, as a positive rule of health, that the warmest dishes the natives delight in, are the most wholesome strangers can use in the putrid climates of the Lower Arabia, Abyssinia, Sennaar, and Egypt itself; and that spirits, and all fermented liquors, should be regarded as...