East by West: A Journey in the Recess, Volume 2R. Bentley and son, 1885 |
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Page 9
... falls in and covers the body . In three hours the work is done . Every particle of flesh is burned away , and there remains only the skeleton . The bones and the teeth the relatives collect and give DINING AND CREMATING . 9.
... falls in and covers the body . In three hours the work is done . Every particle of flesh is burned away , and there remains only the skeleton . The bones and the teeth the relatives collect and give DINING AND CREMATING . 9.
Page 10
... give them sepulture . There are three classes of cremation at this establishment . In the first class each body is burned separately , a charge being made of seven yen , equal to twenty - eight shillings in our money . In the second ...
... give them sepulture . There are three classes of cremation at this establishment . In the first class each body is burned separately , a charge being made of seven yen , equal to twenty - eight shillings in our money . In the second ...
Page 28
... give him the change . So he put down the three dollars . I am sorry and ashamed to say say that the baker , after looking at him and clinking the coins to test the goodness of the silver , swept them all into the till , and Inouyé ...
... give him the change . So he put down the three dollars . I am sorry and ashamed to say say that the baker , after looking at him and clinking the coins to test the goodness of the silver , swept them all into the till , and Inouyé ...
Page 33
... give him the change . So he put down the three dollars . I am sorry and ashamed to say say that the baker , after looking at him and clinking the coins to test the goodness of the silver , swept them all into the till , and Inouyé ...
... give him the change . So he put down the three dollars . I am sorry and ashamed to say say that the baker , after looking at him and clinking the coins to test the goodness of the silver , swept them all into the till , and Inouyé ...
Page 44
... give in without a struggle . Dinner was on the table , and we would at least sit down , making talk of ghastly cheerfulness and eyeing each other suspiciously . We ate our soup and eagerly discussed its relative merits with those of ...
... give in without a struggle . Dinner was on the table , and we would at least sit down , making talk of ghastly cheerfulness and eyeing each other suspiciously . We ate our soup and eagerly discussed its relative merits with those of ...
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Common terms and phrases
Aden Ajmere Arabi banks beautiful Benares Bombay Brahmins British built Cawnpore Ceylon Chinese Cingalese close cloth coin Colombo colour court crowd Delhi door dressed emperor empire England English European eyes face feet flowers foreign fruit garden gates gentleman gharry ghât Government Governor green hand head hills Hindoo Hongkong hour hundred imperial India Inouyé Japan Japanese Jeypore jinrikisha Kandy kind Kioto Kobé lady living look marble ment Mikado miles Mogul morning Nana Sahib native night palace palms Parsee passed Penang pretty prince pumelo punkahs Rajput reached residence river road round sampan schools seemed Shah Jehan Shinto ship side silver stands steamer stood streets temple things throne tion Tokio took town tree tropical trousers Tycoon verandah walk walls whilst women Yokkaichi Yokohama
Popular passages
Page 176 - 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 189 - Our victorious army bears the gates of the temple of Somnauth in triumph from Afghanistan, and the despoiled tomb of Sultan Mahomed looks upon the ruins of Ghuznee. The insult of eight hundred years is at last avenged. The gates of the temple of Somnauth, so long the memorial of your humiliation, are become the proudest record of your national glory; the proof of your superiority in arms over the nations beyond the Indus.
Page 145 - When Babylon was struggling with Nineveh for •supremacy, when Tyre was planting her colonies, when Athens was growing in strength, before Rome had become known, or Greece had contended with Persia, or Cyrus had added lustre to the Persian monarchy, or Nebuchadnezzar had captured Jerusalem, and the inhabitants of Judaea had been carried into captivity, she had already risen to greatness, if not to glory.
Page 117 - France! France aimée et qu'on pleure toujours, Je ne reverrai pas ta terre douce et triste, Tombeau de mes aïeux et nid de mes amours! Je ne reverrai pas ta rive qui nous tente, France! hors le devoir, hélas! j'oublîrai tout. Parmi les éprouvés je planterai ma tente. Je resterai proscrit, voulant rester debout.
Page 174 - Bound the chancel is a row of memorial tablets, set there " to the glory of God and in memory of more than a thousand Christian people who met their deaths hard by between the 6th of June and the 15th of July, 1857.
Page 189 - ... them are filled with fountains. Though the building is an incrustation of gold, marble, and precious stones, water is still its most beautiful ornament. Within these fairy precincts lie the gardens, still overrun with roses and jasmine vines, in the midst of which fountains are playing. There is also a court, paved with squares of black and white marble, so as to form &pachisi board.
Page 45 - There is much carving on this gateway, the figure on one of the panels telling a pretty story. Kiyo-yo, having had a proposal modestly made to him that he should resign the throne, is here figured in the act of washing the ear that has suffered the indignity of receiving the proposal. So great is the insult that nothing less than a waterfall will serve the cleansing purpose. The artist accordingly puts in the waterfall pretty thick ; but Eastern fancy does not stop here. A little farther on are the...
Page 145 - Judasa had been carried into captivity, she had already risen to greatness, if not to glory. Nay, she may have heard of the fame of Solomon, and have sent her ivory, her apes, and her peacocks to adorn his palaces ; while partly with her gold he may have overlaid the Temple of the Lord.
Page 138 - ... accidents of common occurrence. "Now supposing," the director asked,. looking round the class, all burning to distinguish themselves in the august presence of the Governor of Bombay, " supposing a buggy driving along the street were to run over a man and fracture his ribs, what would you do?" " Run after the buggy- wallah (driver) and take him to prison," promptly answered one of the men, policeman instinct overcoming humanitarian impulse.
Page 241 - But the Famine Commissioners declare that ' any native of India who does not trade or own land, and who chooses to drink no spirituous liquor, and to use no English cloth or iron, need pay in taxation only about sevenpence a year on account of the salt he consumes. On a family of three persons, the charge amounts to is. Qd., or about four days' wages of a labouring man and his wife.