A general history and collection of voyages and travels, arranged in systematic order by R. Kerr. Vol.12 (ch.3, sect.5) -vol.17, Issue 241814 |
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Page 273
... piece of history which has appeared since the commencement of our critical career . It is extremely accurate , learned , and con- cise , and at the same time very full of spirit and animation ; exhibiting , as it appears to us , a rare ...
... piece of history which has appeared since the commencement of our critical career . It is extremely accurate , learned , and con- cise , and at the same time very full of spirit and animation ; exhibiting , as it appears to us , a rare ...
Page 293
... piece of board , faced with lead , on which was engraved the English union , with the name of the ship , and her commander , the name of the cove , and the time of her coming in and sailing out of it . While 1 we The following quotation ...
... piece of board , faced with lead , on which was engraved the English union , with the name of the ship , and her commander , the name of the cove , and the time of her coming in and sailing out of it . While 1 we The following quotation ...
Page 294
... piece of a plate of lead , on which we read these remains of English words , HOR'D HERE ICK MAJESTY . There yet ... pieces . This adventure engaged us carefully to examine all the neighbourhood of our anchorage . We therefore ran along ...
... piece of a plate of lead , on which we read these remains of English words , HOR'D HERE ICK MAJESTY . There yet ... pieces . This adventure engaged us carefully to examine all the neighbourhood of our anchorage . We therefore ran along ...
Page 305
... pieces of an iron hoop . We soon found that they were not unacquainted with that metal , which they called parram ; and they made us understand , by signs , that a ship like ours sometimes touched at their islands for refreshment . I ...
... pieces of an iron hoop . We soon found that they were not unacquainted with that metal , which they called parram ; and they made us understand , by signs , that a ship like ours sometimes touched at their islands for refreshment . I ...
Page 306
... piece of fine matting . Their canoes were very well and neatly made , having a hollow tree for the bottom , and planks for the sides , with a sail of fine matting , and an outrigger ; their Topes and netting were also very good . They ...
... piece of fine matting . Their canoes were very well and neatly made , having a hollow tree for the bottom , and planks for the sides , with a sail of fine matting , and an outrigger ; their Topes and netting were also very good . They ...
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A General History and Collection of Voyages and Travels, Arranged in ... History No preview available - 2019 |
Common terms and phrases
a-head anchor appeared ashore Banks and Dr Batavia beach boat bore Botany Bay bottom Bougainville bread-fruit breeze brought called canoes Cape Cape Horn Cape Palliser Cape Saunders chief cloth coast cocoa-nut colour discovered distance Dr Solander Dutch east eight Endeavour River Etoa fathom water feet fire fish four leagues gave half harbour hills hogs Indians inhabitants kind land in sight lies in latitude longitude low island miles morning natives night noon northermost northward o'clock Oberea observed Otaheitans Otaheite piece pinnace plantains Portuguese procured reef returned river rocks round sail scarcely seemed seen Semau sent ship shoals shore side small islands soon south point southward stood streight thing thought three leagues tion told took Tootahah trees Tubourai Tamaide Tupia voyage westward whole wind women wood yawl
Popular passages
Page 47 - An universe of death, which God by curse Created evil, for evil only good, Where all life dies, death lives, and Nature breeds Perverse all monstrous, all prodigious things, Abominable, unutterable, and worse Than fables yet have feigned, or fear conceived, Gorgons, and hydras, and chimeras dire," — this would doubtless have been noble writing.
Page 55 - But man is a noble animal, splendid in ashes, and pompous in the grave, solemnising nativities and deaths with equal lustre, nor omitting ceremonies of bravery in the infamy of his nature.
Page 276 - In the day of prosperity be joyful, but in the day of adversity consider : God also hath set the one over against the other, to the end that man should find nothing after him.
Page 413 - E. As the weather was frequently calm, Mr. Banks went out in a small boat to shoot birds, among which were some albatrosses and sheerwaters. The albatrosses were observed to be larger than those which had been taken northward of the...
Page 15 - ... a tree: the tree which produces it does not indeed shoot up spontaneously ; but if a man plants ten of them in his lifetime, which he may do in about an hour, he will as completely fulfil his duty to his own and future generations as the natives of our less temperate climate can do by ploughing in the cold of winter, and reaping in the summer's heat, as often as these seasons return ; even if, after he has procured bread for his present household, he should convert a surplus into money, and lay...
Page 256 - WERNER'S NOMENCLATURE OF COLOURS. With Additions, arranged so as to render it highly useful to the Arts and Sciences, particularly Zoology, Botany, Chemistry, Mineralogy, and Morbid Anatomy. Annexed to which are Examples selected from Well-known Objects in the Animal, Vegetable, and Mineral Kingdoms.
Page 218 - A prospect more rude and craggy is rarely to be met with ; for inland appears nothing but the summits of mountains of a stupendous height, and consisting of rocks that are totally barren and naked, except where they are covered with snow.
Page 106 - I was now prompted, by my desire to avoid further hostilities, to get some of them on board, as the only method left of convincing them that we intended them no harm, and had it in our power to contribute to their gratification and convenience. Thus far my intentions certainly were not criminal ; and though in the contest, which I had not the least reason to expect, our victory might have been complete without so great an expense of life, yet in such situations, when the command to fire has been...
Page 431 - ... and such things as seemed to be most acceptable. As in my excursion to the westward, I had not found any more convenient harbour than that in which we lay, I determined to go on shore and fix upon some spot, commanded by the ship's guns, where I might throw up a small fort for our defence, and prepare for making our astronomical observation. I therefore took a party of men, and landed without delay, accompanied by Mr. Banks, Dr. Solander, and the astronomer, Mr. Green. We soon fixed upon a part...
Page 12 - ... with which they are covered; from the house, therefore, the inhabitant steps immediately under the shade, which is the most delightful that can be imagined. It consists of groves of bread-fruit and cocoa-nuts, without underwood, which are intersected, in all directions, by the paths that lead from one house to the other. Nothing can be more grateful than this shade in so warm a climate, nor any thing more beautiful than these walks. As there is no underwood, the shade cools without impeding the...