Narrative of a Journey Through the Upper Provinces of India, from Calcutta to Bombay, 1824-1825 (with Notes Upon Cyelon); an Account of a Journey to Madras and the Southern Provinces, 1826; and Letters Written in India, Volume 2J. Murray, 1844 |
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Page 10
... resident , Mr. Ricketts , who had always behaved to him with the utmost kindness and liberality , read the burial service at his grave , and ordered a monument to be erected to his memory , with an inscription in English and Persian ...
... resident , Mr. Ricketts , who had always behaved to him with the utmost kindness and liberality , read the burial service at his grave , and ordered a monument to be erected to his memory , with an inscription in English and Persian ...
Page 13
... residents and British garrisons ; —it still , however , is spoken of as a wild , dreary , and inhospitable country , where provi- sions and water , fruit and forage , are scarce , -where thieves are numerous , and regular inhabitants ...
... residents and British garrisons ; —it still , however , is spoken of as a wild , dreary , and inhospitable country , where provi- sions and water , fruit and forage , are scarce , -where thieves are numerous , and regular inhabitants ...
Page 16
... resident in Agra , and without which none of his officers were likely to give me any assistance in my progress through his country ; the people were civil , but pleaded that they had received no notice or instruc- tions concerning my ...
... resident in Agra , and without which none of his officers were likely to give me any assistance in my progress through his country ; the people were civil , but pleaded that they had received no notice or instruc- tions concerning my ...
Page 20
... resident , and the retreat of the latter from the city . It is not necessary to suppose , as some of the Europeans in Agra do , that if our Government had really tottered , the Raja of Bhurtpoor would have re- joiced in an opportunity ...
... resident , and the retreat of the latter from the city . It is not necessary to suppose , as some of the Europeans in Agra do , that if our Government had really tottered , the Raja of Bhurtpoor would have re- joiced in an opportunity ...
Page 23
... from Colonel Raper , the resident . From the vakeel we learnt that Sir David Ochterlony was still at Jyepoor , in high friendship with the | who will refuse to pray for the conti- nuance CHAP . XXI . ] 23 INDIAN JOURNAL .
... from Colonel Raper , the resident . From the vakeel we learnt that Sir David Ochterlony was still at Jyepoor , in high friendship with the | who will refuse to pray for the conti- nuance CHAP . XXI . ] 23 INDIAN JOURNAL .
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Common terms and phrases
Agra appearance arrived Baroda beautiful Bengal better Bheels Bishop blessing boats Bombay Brahmins British building bungalow called Candy Captain carved chaplain Charun Christian Church clergy Colombo considerable cultivated David Ochterlony dear Deckan Delhi district dress elephants Elphinstone England English European favourable Government Guzerât handsome heard hills Hindoo Hindoostanee Hindostan hope horses India inhabitants island journey jungle Jyepoor Kairah kind less Lord Madras Maharatta Malwah manner matchlocks means ment miles missionaries morning Mussulman native Neemuch neighbourhood neighbouring officers ornamented palanquins Parsee party passed Patans persons plain Poonah poor Portuguese present pretty principal raja Rajpoots received REGINALD CALCUTTA residence river road round ruins Salsette seemed seen sent Sepoys servants side Sir Edward Barnes suwarrs temple tents thakoor tion told town Travancore trees usual vakeel village wild
Popular passages
Page 276 - 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 21 - Blessed are they that do his commandments, that they may have right to the tree of life, and may enter in through the gates into the city. 15 For without are dogs, and sorcerers, and whoremongers, and murderers, and idolaters, and whosoever loveth and maketh a lie.
Page 267 - ... 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 267 - Schwartz and his fifty years' labour among the Heathen, the extraordinary influence and popularity which he acquired, both with Mussulmans, Hindoos, and contending European governments, I need give you no account, except that my idea of him has been raised since I came into the south of India. I used to suspect that, with many admirable qualities, there was too great a mixture of intrigue in his character, that he was too much of a political prophet, and that the veneration which the heathen paid,...
Page 270 - Commit 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 228 - ... a system which tends, more than anything else the Devil has yet invented, to destroy the feelings of general benevolence, and to make nine-tenths of mankind the hopeless slaves of the remainder ; and in the total absence of any popular system of morals, or any single lesson which the people at large ever hear, to live virtuously and do good to each other.
Page 146 - ... 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 10 - The earnest desire of this good man is to be ordained a clergyman of the church of England, and if God spares his life and mine, I hope, during the Ember weeks in this next autumn, to confer orders on him.
Page 138 - ... at the East end) are very singular and beautiful. Each consists of a large cap, like a bell, finely carved, and surmounted by two elephants with their trunks entwined, and each carrying two male and one female figure, which our guides again told us were viragees. The timber ribs which decorate the roof, whatever their use may have been, are very perfect, and have a good effect in the perspective of the interior, which is all extremely clean and in good repair, and would be, in fact, a very noble...
Page 228 - I have taken some pains to inform myself, really appears to me the worst, both in the degrading notions which it gives of the Deity ; in the endless round of its burdensome ceremonies, which occupy the time and distract the thoughts, without either instructing or interesting its votaries; in the filthy acts of uncleanness and cruelty, not only permitted but enjoined, and inseparably interwoven with those ceremonies...