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 India, Volume 3J. Murray, 1828 |
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Page 3
... town , and that we should find him without the gates under some trees . We therefore quickened our pace as much as was compatible with the comfort of our attendants on foot , and with the movements of the suwarree elephant , who was , I ...
... town , and that we should find him without the gates under some trees . We therefore quickened our pace as much as was compatible with the comfort of our attendants on foot , and with the movements of the suwarree elephant , who was , I ...
Page 15
... town duties to these and other local purposes . One of these men , who holds a high military command , but whose name has escaped me , was a relation to the Tussildar of Futtehgunge , and a very well - bred and sensible man . He came ...
... town duties to these and other local purposes . One of these men , who holds a high military command , but whose name has escaped me , was a relation to the Tussildar of Futtehgunge , and a very well - bred and sensible man . He came ...
Page 27
... towns , a custom ruinous to health and comfort , but accounted a necessary pre- caution against the desperate attacks to which they might otherwise be liable . The magistrates and collectors have a larger force of armed men in their ...
... towns , a custom ruinous to health and comfort , but accounted a necessary pre- caution against the desperate attacks to which they might otherwise be liable . The magistrates and collectors have a larger force of armed men in their ...
Page 31
... towns , where the children of the bunyans learnt writing , reading , accounts , and such portions of the national religion as their caste is allowed to receive . But there was no gratuitous instruction ; and the Ryuts from poverty , and ...
... towns , where the children of the bunyans learnt writing , reading , accounts , and such portions of the national religion as their caste is allowed to receive . But there was no gratuitous instruction ; and the Ryuts from poverty , and ...
Page 33
... military esta- blishments which its disordered state , and the martial habits of the people , require . March 26. - We marched to Nerriad , a large VOL . III . D and well - built town , containing , as its NERRIAD . 33.
... military esta- blishments which its disordered state , and the martial habits of the people , require . March 26. - We marched to Nerriad , a large VOL . III . D and well - built town , containing , as its NERRIAD . 33.
Common terms and phrases
affectionate appearance Archdeacon arrival attended Barnes beautiful believe Benares Bengal Bheels Bishop blessing boat Bombay Brahmins bungalow called Candy Ceylon Chaplain Christian Church Missionary Church Missionary Society Church of England Cingalese Clergy climate Colombo comfort considerable Dacca dear Deckan district Elphinstone England English European favourable Government Guzerāt handsome heard heathen HEBER Hindoos Hindoostanee Hindostan honour hope horses India island journey jungle Kairah kind language less letter Lord Madras Maharatta manner ment miles military morning Mussulmans natives neighbourhood officers ornamented palanquins Parsee passed persons Poonah poor Portuguese prayers preached present pretty principal racter Raja reason received REGINALD CALCUTTA residence river road round Salsette schools seems seen sent Sepoys servants shew Sir Edward Barnes society station Tamul temple thing tion told town Travancore trees usual valueable village young
Popular passages
Page 483 - And if he shall neglect to hear them, tell it unto the Church : but if he neglect to hear the Church, let him be unto thee as a heathen man and a Publican.
Page 254 - I do not by any means assent to the pictures of depravity and general worthlessness which some have drawn of the Hindoos. They are decidedly, by nature, a mild, pleasing, and intelligent race ; sober, parsimonious, and, where an object is held out to them, most industrious and persevering.
Page 133 - India is concerned, appeared to me peculiarly wise and liberal, and he is evidently attached to, and thinks well of the country and its inhabitants. His public measures, in their general tendency, evince a steady wish to improve their present condition. No government in India pays so much attention to schools and public institutions for education. In none are the taxes lighter, and in the administration of justice to the natives in their own languages, in the establishment of...
Page 478 - And the next day he shewed himself unto them as they strove, and would have set them at one again, saying, Sirs, ye are brethren ; why do ye wrong one to another...
Page 468 - And now, grace, mercy, and peace from God, the Father, and our Lord Jesus Christ...
Page 460 - ... to his care, and from attempting whose conversion to Christianity he seems to have abstained, from a feeling of honour. His other converts were between six and seven thousand, besides those which his predecessors and companions in the cause had brought over.
Page 133 - ... in the degree in which he employs the natives in official situations, and the countenance and familiarity which he extends to all the natives of rank who approach him, he seems to have reduced to practice, almost all the reforms which had struck me as most required in the system of government pursued in those provinces of our Eastern Empire which I had previously visited...
Page 231 - But their houses are adorned with verandahs and Corinthian pillars ; they have very handsome carriages, often built in England ; they speak tolerable English, and they show a considerable liking for European society, where (which unfortunately is not always the case) they are encouraged or permitted to frequent it on terms of . any thing like equality.
Page 469 - Bishops of their ordaining. mit thy way unto the Lord, and trust in Him, and He shall bring it to pass." Especially I have been desirous to hear from thee of the good estate of our brethren, the faithful, in Malabar, the Bishops, presbyters, and deacons ; and also of my own children in Christ, the English presbyters who sojourn among you at...
Page 94 - Carli, where such an ornament, but of greater size, is likewise found, that a large gilt umbrella used to spring from it. This solid dome appears to be the usual symbol of Buddhist adoration, and, with its umbrella ornament, may be traced in the Shoo-Madoo of Pegu, and other more remote structures of the same faith. Though it is different in its form and style of ornament from the Lingam, I cannot help thinking it has been originally intended to represent the same popular object of that almost universal...