India, Past and Present, Volume 2H.T. Coates & Company, 1903 |
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Page 11
... hundred yards . The Khyber Mountains form the terminal spur of the Safed Koh , as that great range gradually declines to the level of the valley of the Kábul River . The Khyber Pass is the great northern trade and military route between ...
... hundred yards . The Khyber Mountains form the terminal spur of the Safed Koh , as that great range gradually declines to the level of the valley of the Kábul River . The Khyber Pass is the great northern trade and military route between ...
Page 11
... hundred yards . The Khyber Mountains form the terminal spur of the Safed Koh , as that great range gradually declines to the level of the valley of the Kábul River . The Khyber Pass is the great northern trade and military route between ...
... hundred yards . The Khyber Mountains form the terminal spur of the Safed Koh , as that great range gradually declines to the level of the valley of the Kábul River . The Khyber Pass is the great northern trade and military route between ...
Page 15
... hundred feet to a comfortable carriageway . The hills on either side are about thirteen hundred feet in height , and vary from sheer ascents to gradients practicable for artillery . In a sort of recess of the mountain wall stands the ...
... hundred feet to a comfortable carriageway . The hills on either side are about thirteen hundred feet in height , and vary from sheer ascents to gradients practicable for artillery . In a sort of recess of the mountain wall stands the ...
Page 16
... hundred ; at Landi Kotál about thirty - four hundred , and at Dhaka , where the pass debouches upon the plains of Afghánistán , the elevation is only fourteen hundred feet above the sea . CHAPTER II . AMRITSAR . SURPASSING Delhi and ...
... hundred ; at Landi Kotál about thirty - four hundred , and at Dhaka , where the pass debouches upon the plains of Afghánistán , the elevation is only fourteen hundred feet above the sea . CHAPTER II . AMRITSAR . SURPASSING Delhi and ...
Page 25
... hundred and thirty feet from the ground . The edifice was erected in memory of Atal Rái , the youngest son of Hur Govind . In the exercise of the supernatural powers with which he was gifted , the young man had raised to life the son of ...
... hundred and thirty feet from the ground . The edifice was erected in memory of Atal Rái , the youngest son of Hur Govind . In the exercise of the supernatural powers with which he was gifted , the young man had raised to life the son of ...
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Common terms and phrases
Afghán Agra Ahmedábád Ajmír Akbar Amritsar ancient Anuradhapura Asoka Aurangzeb Bábar beautiful Benares Bráhmans British Buddh Gaya Buddha Buddhist building built capital carved caste Cawnpur cenotaph centre century Ceylon chief Chitor Christian Church Delhi dome dynasty elephants Emperor enclosure erected garden Gate gateway ghát ground Gujarát Gwalior Hall hand hills Hindu Hindustán hundred feet India inlaid inscription Jahán Jahángír Jain Jaipur Khán King Kutab Lahore Lucknow Mahál Mahárájá Malabar Maráthá Marwar Masjid mausoleum miles Minár minarets missionary mosque Mughal Muhammad Muhammadan Musalmán Náná native Nestorian Palace pass Pathán Persian Peshawar pillars priests prince Rájá Rajputs Rána Rání red sandstone Residency river rock roof ruins rulers sacred Saint satí sculptures Shah shrine side Sikhs Sindhia Singh Siva spot square stands stone story streets stupa Sultán surrounded Táj tank temple thousand throne tion tomb tower trees Udaipur Ujjain walls white marble women
Popular passages
Page 240 - So saying, the good Lord Buddha seated him Under a jambu-tree, with ankles crossed — As holy statues sit — and first began To meditate this deep disease of life, What its far source and whence its remedy. So vast a pity filled him, such wide love For living things, such passion to heal pain, That by their stress his princely spirit passed To ecstasy, and, purged from mortal taint Of sense and self, the boy attained thereat Dhyana, first step of
Page 265 - The handful of sepoys who attended Hastings would probably have been sufficient to overawe Moorshedabad, or the Black Town of Calcutta. But they were unequal to a conflict with the hardy rabble of Benares. The streets surrounding the palace were filled by an immense multitude, of whom a large proportion, as is usual in Upper India, wore arms. The tumult became a fight, and the fight a massacre. The English officers defended themselves with desperate courage against overwhelming numbers, and fell,...
Page 282 - There he found that Bartholomew, one of the twelve apostles, had preached the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ according to the Gospel of Matthew, which, written in Hebrew characters, he brought with him on his return to Alexandria.
Page 317 - It was not one sustained note, but a multitude of tiny sounds, each clear and distinct in itself ; the sweetest treble mingling with the lowest bass. On applying the ear to the woodwork of the boat, the vibration was greatly increased in volume by conduction.
Page 240 - ... and through the long fatal street, were gathered there to perform the last rites to one of England's noblest dead. As long as the memory of great deeds, and high courage, and spotless self-devotion is cherished amongst his countrymen, so long will Havelock's lonely tomb in the...
Page 240 - The stone is altogether as bright as jade. It is glistening, and sparkles like light; and all those who pray fervently before it see from time to time, according to their petitions, figures with good or bad signs.
Page 210 - ... it was the sign of immense riches and increasing prosperity. He had a very loud voice, and a very elegant and pleasant way of speech. His manners and habits were quite different from those of other persons, and his visage was full of godly dignity.
Page 222 - Sacred to the perpetual memory of a great company of Christian people, chiefly women and children, who near this spot were cruelly murdered by the followers of the rebel Nana Dhundu Panth of Bithur, and cast, the dying with the dead, into the well below, on the xvth day of July, MDCCCLVII.
Page 124 - The pile flamed like a volcano ; the faithful queens laved their bodies in the flames, as do the celestials in the lake of Mansurwar. The gods above exclaimed " Dhun, Dhun Ajit ! who maintained the faith, and overwhelmed the Asuras.
Page 120 - They are small sturdy men, well made, though not handsome. They are all active, laborious, hardy, and persevering. If they have none of the pride and dignity of the Rajputs, they have none of their indolence or their want of worldly wisdom.