An Account of the Voyages Undertaken by the Order of His Present Majesty, for Making Discoveries in the Southern Hemisphere: And Successively Performed by Commodore Byron, Captain Wallis, Captain Carteret, and Captain Cook, in the Dolphin, the Swallow, and the Endeavour: Drawn Up from the Journals which Were Kept by the Several Commanders, and from the Papers of Joseph Banks, Esq, Band 2 |
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An Expedition up the River Thames : Some Account of the Indians wbo inbabit its
Banks , and the fine Timber that grows there . Several interviews with the Natives
on different Parts of the Coast , and a Skirmish with tbem upon an Isand .
An Expedition up the River Thames : Some Account of the Indians wbo inbabit its
Banks , and the fine Timber that grows there . Several interviews with the Natives
on different Parts of the Coast , and a Skirmish with tbem upon an Isand .
Seite 1
I. 'The Ceremonies of an Indian Funeral particularly described : General
Observativns on the Subject : A Character found among the Indians, to which the
Ancients paid great Veneration : A Robbery at the Fort, and its Consequences ;
with a ...
I. 'The Ceremonies of an Indian Funeral particularly described : General
Observativns on the Subject : A Character found among the Indians, to which the
Ancients paid great Veneration : A Robbery at the Fort, and its Consequences ;
with a ...
Seite 4
When an honest devotee of the Church of Rome reads, that there are Indians on
the banks of the Ganges, who believe that they (hall secure the happiness of a
future state by dying with a cow's tail in their hands, he laughs at their folly and ...
When an honest devotee of the Church of Rome reads, that there are Indians on
the banks of the Ganges, who believe that they (hall secure the happiness of a
future state by dying with a cow's tail in their hands, he laughs at their folly and ...
Seite
I. The Ceremonies of an Indian Funeral particularly defcribed : General
Observations on the Subject : A Character found among the Indians , to which the
Ancients paid great Veneration : A Robbery at the Port , and its Consequences ;
with a ...
I. The Ceremonies of an Indian Funeral particularly defcribed : General
Observations on the Subject : A Character found among the Indians , to which the
Ancients paid great Veneration : A Robbery at the Port , and its Consequences ;
with a ...
Seite
An Expedition up the River Thames : Some Account of the Indians wbo inbabit its
Banks , and the fine Timber that grows there . Several interviews with the Natives
on different Parts of the Coast , and a Skirmish with them upon an Isand .
An Expedition up the River Thames : Some Account of the Indians wbo inbabit its
Banks , and the fine Timber that grows there . Several interviews with the Natives
on different Parts of the Coast , and a Skirmish with them upon an Isand .
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An Account of the Voyages Undertaken by the Order of His Present Majesty for ... John Hawkesworth,John Byron,Samuel Wallis Keine Leseprobe verfügbar - 2018 |
An Account of the Voyages Undertaken by the Order of His Present Majesty for ... John Byron,Cook,John Hawkesworth Keine Leseprobe verfügbar - 2018 |
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
afternoon almoſt alſo anchor appeared Banks boat body bore bottom brought called canoes Cape carried cloſe cloth coaſt continued courſe covered diſcovered diſtance eaſt eight fail fathoms feet fire firſt fiſh five four freſh gave half hand harbour head hills hour houſes hundred immediately Indians inhabitants iſland kind land latitude leagues leaves leſs lies longitude manner mean miles morning moſt natives never night nine noon northward o'clock obſerved piece probably produce received returned river rocks round ſaid ſame ſaw ſea ſee ſeemed ſeen ſent ſet ſeven ſeveral ſhe ſhip ſhoals ſhore ſhould ſide ſituation ſmall ſome ſoon ſtood ſuch taken theſe thing thoſe thought told took trees Tupia uſe weather weſt whole wind women wood
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 303 - ... her off the ledge upon which she rested, towards the deep water. About five o'clock in the afternoon, we observed the tide begin to rise, but we observed at the same time that the leak increased to a most alarming degree, so that two more pumps were manned, but unhappily only one of them would work. Three of the pumps, however, were kept going, and at nine o'clock the ship righted; but the leak had gained upon us so considerably, that it was imagined she must go to the bottom as soon as she ceased...
Seite 282 - Upon these mangroves also we saw small green caterpillars in great numbers : Their bodies were thick set with hairs, and they were ranged upon the leaves side by side like a file of soldiers, to the number of twenty or "thirty together : When we touched them, we found that the hair of their bodies had the quality of a nettle, and gave us a much more acute, though less durable pain.
Seite 376 - Upon such ornaments as they had, they set so great a value, that they would never part with the least article for any thing we could offer; which was the more extraordinary as our beads and ribbons were ornaments of the same kind, but of a more regular form and more showy materials. They had indeed no idea of traffic, nor could we communicate any to them : They received the things that we gave them ; but never appeared to understand our signs when we required a return.
Seite 366 - New Holland, or, as I have now called the eastern coast, New South Wales, is of a larger extent than any other country in the known world that does not bear the name of a continent ; the length of coast along which we sailed, reduced to a straight line, is no less than twentyseven degrees of latitude, amounting to near 2000 miles, so that its square surface must be much more than equal to all Europe.
Seite 405 - ... the beach, abreast of the ship ; supposing therefore that the Dutch had a settlement here, I sent Lieutenant Gore ashore, to wait upon the governor, or the chief person residing upon the spot, and acquaint him who we were, and for what purpose we had touched upon the coast. As soon as he came ashore, he was received by a guard of between twenty and thirty Indians, armed with...
Seite 79 - ... in one end of it was a square hole, in the middle of which was a ring touching the sides, and leaving the angles open, so as to form a round hole within a square one.
Seite 237 - A farther proof that human nature is here untainted with disease, is the great number of old men that we saw, many of whom, by the loss of their hair and teeth, appeared to be very ancient, yet none of them were decrepit, and though not equal to the young in muscular strength, were not a whit behind them in cheerfulness and vivacity.
Seite 381 - ... that the bark of a tree becomes thicker and stronger by being suffered to remain upon the trunk after it has been cut round. The canoes of New Holland are as mean and rude as the houses. Those...
Seite 22 - Tupia sustained himself in this scene with a firmness and resolution truly admirable : he wept, indeed, but the effort that he made to conceal his tears, concurred, with them, to do him honour.
Seite 304 - To those only who have waited in a state of such suspense, Death has approached in all his terrors ; and as the dreadful moment that was to determine our fate came on, every one saw his own sensations pictured in the countenances of his companions...