Narrative of a Journey Through the Upper Provinces of India: From Calcutta to Bombay, 1824-1825, (with Notes Upon Ceylon,) an Account of a Journey to Madras and the Southern Provinces, 1826, and Letters Written in IndiaMurray, 1828 - 515 pages |
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Page iii
... Journal to you , I have the melancholy satisfaction of fulfilling the intention of its Author . Had he lived to revise and complete the Work himself , he would more ably have expressed to you his sense of the obligations which he felt ...
... Journal to you , I have the melancholy satisfaction of fulfilling the intention of its Author . Had he lived to revise and complete the Work himself , he would more ably have expressed to you his sense of the obligations which he felt ...
Page v
... Journal is , that its readers may be made ac- quainted with the nature and extent of the duties performed by the Bishop during the short time he presided over the Indian Church , as well as with the difficulties he encountered in the ...
... Journal is , that its readers may be made ac- quainted with the nature and extent of the duties performed by the Bishop during the short time he presided over the Indian Church , as well as with the difficulties he encountered in the ...
Page vii
... journal , which for that purpose was written more in detail . She has endeavoured to supply , in some degree , the deficiency , by inserting a few pages in the third volume . Having thus explained the circumstances under which the work ...
... journal , which for that purpose was written more in detail . She has endeavoured to supply , in some degree , the deficiency , by inserting a few pages in the third volume . Having thus explained the circumstances under which the work ...
Page viii
... journal ; but the Editor is convinced that the following extract from a private letter will be peculiarly gratifying to the members of Government in Calcutta , to whom , espe- cially to Mr. Lushington , the Secretary for the ...
... journal ; but the Editor is convinced that the following extract from a private letter will be peculiarly gratifying to the members of Government in Calcutta , to whom , espe- cially to Mr. Lushington , the Secretary for the ...
Page xv
... at Barrackpoor .... 39 Native carriages 270 .... 271 307 315 .... 320 Pagodas on the Ganges .... 60 Swinging .... 99 View on the Ganges ... 327 ....... Gateway at Ghazeepoor .... 347 ོ་ ཉ München JOURNAL OF A VOYAGE TO INDIA . PAGE.
... at Barrackpoor .... 39 Native carriages 270 .... 271 307 315 .... 320 Pagodas on the Ganges .... 60 Swinging .... 99 View on the Ganges ... 327 ....... Gateway at Ghazeepoor .... 347 ོ་ ཉ München JOURNAL OF A VOYAGE TO INDIA . PAGE.
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Common terms and phrases
Abdullah Allahabad animals appearance arrived attend bamboos bank Barrackpoor beautiful Benares Bengal birds boat boatmen Boglipoor boys Brahmin breeze building Buxar Calcutta Captain Christian Chunar Church colour Company's considerable Corrie crew crowd Dacca dandees deck Dinapoor distance dress England English European extremely favourable Ganges garden Ghazeepoor Government handsome heard Hindoo Hindoostanee Hooghly indigo interest JOURNAL kind land less looking Lord Lord Amherst miles Monghyr morning mosque Mussulmans native Nawâb neighbourhood neighbouring never night nullah o'clock officers ornamented pagoda passed Patna persons pinnace poor prayers present pretty Puharrees pulwars resembling rice river round ruins sails seems seen sent Sepoys Serang servants shewed ship shore side silver sticks soon sort stream Sunderbunds supposed suttees thing tion to-day told trees tyger usual vessel village VOYAGE TO INDIA walked whole wind young