Journal, Volume 131844 |
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Page 513
... ascent , very difficult to surmount in wet weather ; the fort has but three sides , being open to the water side . There are one hundred and fifty infantry and fifty cavalry residing within the walls ; the remaining ryots live outside ...
... ascent , very difficult to surmount in wet weather ; the fort has but three sides , being open to the water side . There are one hundred and fifty infantry and fifty cavalry residing within the walls ; the remaining ryots live outside ...
Page 527
... Ascent of the Sulliman range ( Kalee Koh , ) at a place called Ootpa- lana , or camel saddle : some say from the shape of the hill : some say from the steepness which causes even a saddle to fall off in the ascent . This is a zig - zag ...
... Ascent of the Sulliman range ( Kalee Koh , ) at a place called Ootpa- lana , or camel saddle : some say from the shape of the hill : some say from the steepness which causes even a saddle to fall off in the ascent . This is a zig - zag ...
Page 528
... ascent and descent . Nika - panee 12 miles ; no habitations , sufficient water for drinking . Fort of Dost Maho- med Khán , a level road 5 miles , from the former stage . Fort of Fazul Khán .... I mile , Ditto ditto , Aly Khan , 1 mile ...
... ascent and descent . Nika - panee 12 miles ; no habitations , sufficient water for drinking . Fort of Dost Maho- med Khán , a level road 5 miles , from the former stage . Fort of Fazul Khán .... I mile , Ditto ditto , Aly Khan , 1 mile ...
Page 529
... ascent ; soap stone met with . No fixed habitations ; shepherds sometimes come here for a few months . Bálá Dákai , a hill 】 which is turned , the road leading through the bed of the stream . Lwang , or ford knee deep . The stream ...
... ascent ; soap stone met with . No fixed habitations ; shepherds sometimes come here for a few months . Bálá Dákai , a hill 】 which is turned , the road leading through the bed of the stream . Lwang , or ford knee deep . The stream ...
Page 543
... ascent and descent of 200 and 100 paces , a cross road from Murravee Spilingee and Kelat also join , a description of which also follows . Bolan then takes a 65 ° N. E .; the breadth between the hills or heights on both sides is about ...
... ascent and descent of 200 and 100 paces , a cross road from Murravee Spilingee and Kelat also join , a description of which also follows . Bolan then takes a 65 ° N. E .; the breadth between the hills or heights on both sides is about ...
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Common terms and phrases
appear arrived ascent Bampoor bank Beejapoor boats Boodhist called camels Candahar Carnatic Cherra Chiculdah chief Chund clay slate coss cross cultivated descend Dezak Dhemapoor direction distance district ditto ditto ducats earth earthquake East encamped fall feet Ghaut ghee gneiss Golaghat grey greywacke ground Gwadar Hajee Herat hills Hindoo Hirun Phall Hodgson horses Hymung inches India inhabitants Jullalabad jungle juwaree Kalat Kangsing Kasia Kech Khan Kharan Kumaon land Larayen latter leaves level road Linn Mahommed maunds Meer mica miles mountains Mukran Mulla Mundleysir Muscat Naga Naikers Namsang North Nowgong nullah observed Panjgoor Pass Persian petioled plain quartz quartz rock rain Rajah Ramgunga remarkable revenue rice river rivulet Rohillas Roxb rupees sandstone schist Shah side Sohohai South species specimens stone stream Tanjore thence tion trees tribe Tulluck wara valley village West الي ثم
Popular passages
Page 617 - This heap be witness, and this pillar be witness, that I will not pass over this heap to thee, and that thou shalt not pass over this heap and this pillar unto me, for harm.
Page 924 - Is chastity cultivated, or is it remarkably defective, and are there any classes amongst the people of either sex by whom it is remarkably cultivated, or the reverse, either generally or on particular occasions ? 33. Are there any superstitions connected with this subject? 34. What are the ceremonies and practices connected with marriage ? 35. Is polygamy permitted and practised, and to what extent ? 36. Is divorce tolerated, or frequent? 37. How are widows treated ? 38. What is the prevailing food...
Page lxxxii - RAJAGRIHA. honey, and has a strong rather disagreeable smell, although it cannot be called very offensive. When kept in a bottle with a glass stopper for some months, it acquires a deeper brown colour, and becomes thicker ; and, exposed to the air, it may soon be made into pills. It seems to be very different from a substance which, in Nepal, is called by the same name. From the hot springs in the vicinity, and the heat of the cave below, I suspect that it exudes from the action of subterraneous...
Page 617 - And Jacob said unto his brethren, Gather stones : and they took stones, and made an heap ; and they did eat there upon the heap. And Laban called it Jegar-sahadutha : but Jacob called it Galeed. 48 And Laban said, This heap is a witness between me and thee this day.
Page 517 - Mundleysir, the northern hank, after about thirty miles becomes rocky and precipitous and consists of gently inclined beds chiefly of greenstone slate, containing interposed mica in small grains. But the island of Mundatta and part of the opposite bank appear mostly to consist of hornstone slate of a reddish or greenish grey and sometimes porphyritic. Above this, for a considerable distance is, on each bank, a very wild woody tract, resembling that already noticed below Chiculdah, excepting that...
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Page lxxxii - From the hot springs in the vicinity, and the heat of the cave below, I suspect that it exudes from the action of subterraneous fire. The natives pretend that monkies eat it, and attribute the small quantity procured to their depredations ; but I think that the circumstance is doubtful, and have no doubt that, with care and a ladder, several pounds might be procured, should it be found useful: but it owes its celebrity among the natives to its being supposed to possess the imaginary quality of an...
Page cxxxii - The Annals and Magazine of Natural History, including Zoology, Botany and Geology ; by Sir W.
Page 870 - ... of warm temperature) is divided from the Surdsil (or region of cold temperature) only by the steep Pass of Badam-cheshmeh, (ie Almond-spring.) The Pass of Badam-cheshmeh lies S. of the Cabul river, between little Cabul and Barik-ab. Snow falls on the Cabul side of this Pass, but not on the Kuruk-sai and Lamghanat side. The moment you descend this hill Pass, you see quite another world. Its timber is different, its grains are of another sort, its animals of a different species, and the manners...