The Menageries: Quadrupeds, Described and Drawn from Living Subjects..Charles Knight, 1831 |
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Page 38
... enemy starts up on every side . Even the commonest processes of nature require to be watched . They are either allies or foes . The sun , and the rain , and the dew , and the wind , are as much annoyances as assistants , unless they co ...
... enemy starts up on every side . Even the commonest processes of nature require to be watched . They are either allies or foes . The sun , and the rain , and the dew , and the wind , are as much annoyances as assistants , unless they co ...
Page 69
... enemy . The old naturalists explained this pecu- liarity by the doctrine of antipathies ; in the same way that they affirmed that the elephant was fond of an ox , upon the principle of sympathies . It may ap- pear something equally ...
... enemy . The old naturalists explained this pecu- liarity by the doctrine of antipathies ; in the same way that they affirmed that the elephant was fond of an ox , upon the principle of sympathies . It may ap- pear something equally ...
Page 71
... enemies . His tusks , or , as the French naturalists more properly call them , his défenses , enable him not only to clear his way through the thick forests in which he lives , by rooting up small trees and tearing down cross branches ...
... enemies . His tusks , or , as the French naturalists more properly call them , his défenses , enable him not only to clear his way through the thick forests in which he lives , by rooting up small trees and tearing down cross branches ...
Page 121
... enemies to him in all the tribes amongst whom he had so long lived in a state of comparative security . The trade in ivory had been suspended for more than a thousand years . There were periods , indeed , in * See Menageries , vol . i ...
... enemies to him in all the tribes amongst whom he had so long lived in a state of comparative security . The trade in ivory had been suspended for more than a thousand years . There were periods , indeed , in * See Menageries , vol . i ...
Page 127
... enemy , and that enemy in his turn becomes a victim to one more adroit or more powerful than himself . The English , in the sixteenth century , used to trade for ivory on the coast of Guinea . While the Portuguese retained their ...
... enemy , and that enemy in his turn becomes a victim to one more adroit or more powerful than himself . The English , in the sixteenth century , used to trade for ivory on the coast of Guinea . While the Portuguese retained their ...
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Common terms and phrases
Africa African elephant amongst ancient animal appears army Arrian Aurengzebe battle beasts Bernier body bones of elephants Cæsar carried Carthaginians century chap command Corse covered Cuvier danger described Diodorus Siculus earth elephant's Emperor employed enemy exhibited extraordinary feet female elephant fight fire foot force forests fossil gold habits head herd Hindostan horse Hottentots hundred hunters hunting immense inclosure Indian Indian elephant ivory keddah keeper killed king Kublai Khan length lion Livy male elephants menageries mode Mogul mohout mounted muscles native nature obedience passage Pausanias peculiar phants Phidias Pliny pomp possessed princes proboscis quadrupeds Quatremère de Quincy remains remarkable rhinoceros riders river Roman Rome round sagacity says sculpture shew side skull species splendour Sports statuary teeth terror thousand tiger tion Travels trees troops trunk tusks white elephant wild elephants wood wounded young
Popular passages
Page 318 - Syria was thy merchant By reason of the multitude of the wares of thy making : They occupied in thy fairs With emeralds, purple, and broidered work, And fine linen, and coral and agate.
Page 318 - And twelve lions stood there on the one side and on the other upon the six steps: there was not the like made in any kingdom.
Page 383 - Some drill and bore The solid earth, and from the strata there Extract a register, by which we learn That He who made it and revealed its date To Moses, was mistaken in its age.
Page 66 - THE first shall be of the elephant, whereof there generally passeth an opinion it hath no joints; and this absurdity is seconded with another, that being unable to lie down it sleepeth against a tree; which the hunters observing, do saw it almost asunder, whereon the beast relying, by the fall of the tree falls also down itself, and is able to rise no more.
Page 182 - One lesson, shepherd, let us two divide, Taught both by what she shows, and what conceals • Never to blend our pleasure or our pride With sorrow of the meanest thing that feels.
Page 39 - He lieth under the shady trees, in the covert of the reed, and fens. The shady trees cover him with their shadow; the willows of the brook compass him about.
Page 205 - Makkah, and would have entered it, the elephant on which he rode, which was a very large one, and named Mahmud, refused to advance any nigher to the town, but knelt down whenever they endeavoured to force him that way, though he would rise and march briskly enough if they turned him towards any other quarter : and while matters were in this posture, on a sudden a large flock of birds, like swallows, came flying from the sea-coast, every one of which carried three stones, one in each foot, and one...
Page 76 - Trampling his path through wood and brake, And canes which crackling fall before his way, And tassel-grass, whose silvery feathers play O'ertopping the young trees, On comes the Elephant, to slake His thirst at noon in yon pellucid springs. Lo! from his trunk upturn'd, aloft he flinys The grateful shower ; and now Plucking the broad-leaved bough Of yonder plane, with wavey motion slow, Fanning the languid air, He moves it to and fro.
Page 311 - Numidia; the perpetual stream of hot water was poured into the capacious basins through so many wide mouths of bright and massy silver; and the meanest Roman could purchase, with a small copper coin, the daily enjoyment of a scene of pomp and luxury which might excite the envy of the kings of Asia.
Page 97 - ... that a sufficient number of these (which may be compared to bundles of wood) might be lowered into the well to make a pile, which might be raised to the top, if the animal could be instructed as to the necessary means of laying them in regular succession under his feet. Permission having been obtained from the...