Sketch of the Mosquito Shore: Including the Territory of Poyais, Descriptive of the Country; with Some Information as to Its Productions, the Best Mode of Culture, & C. ... |
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Page 7
... mouth , and has a reef of rocks laying off its westernmost entrance . Salt River Lagoon , lays a few miles inland ... mouths , which are formed by Spark's island . Several considerable streams empty themselves in- to it , the chief of ...
... mouth , and has a reef of rocks laying off its westernmost entrance . Salt River Lagoon , lays a few miles inland ... mouths , which are formed by Spark's island . Several considerable streams empty themselves in- to it , the chief of ...
Page 8
... mouth of the river are the Great Rocks , which shew themselves like a round bluff ; they are close to the sea side , about a mile from the shore . The bluff point of the Great Rocks to the eastward , and old Roman point , make Lime ...
... mouth of the river are the Great Rocks , which shew themselves like a round bluff ; they are close to the sea side , about a mile from the shore . The bluff point of the Great Rocks to the eastward , and old Roman point , make Lime ...
Page 12
... mouth , with four fathoms water , a short distance from the coast ; its sources are about eighty miles in the interior of the country ; on its left bank , and near the mouth , are some fine savannahs , where the Indian chief , General ...
... mouth , with four fathoms water , a short distance from the coast ; its sources are about eighty miles in the interior of the country ; on its left bank , and near the mouth , are some fine savannahs , where the Indian chief , General ...
Page 13
... mouths , one of which empties itself into Bre- wers lagoon . On the easternmost bank of the Patook is Patook Point ... mouth is very wide , the opening may always be seen 2 It is shallow , has a bar , and is only navigable for small ...
... mouths , one of which empties itself into Bre- wers lagoon . On the easternmost bank of the Patook is Patook Point ... mouth is very wide , the opening may always be seen 2 It is shallow , has a bar , and is only navigable for small ...
Page 18
... mouth , is the settlement of Tobuncana . Cape Gracias a Dios , this celebrated cape lays in about 15 ° north latitude . The harbour is formed by an arm of the sea , large enough to hold the navy of Great Britain , and open only from E ...
... mouth , is the settlement of Tobuncana . Cape Gracias a Dios , this celebrated cape lays in about 15 ° north latitude . The harbour is formed by an arm of the sea , large enough to hold the navy of Great Britain , and open only from E ...
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Sketch of the Mosquito Shore, Including the Territory of Poyais, Descriptive ... Thomas Strangeways No preview available - 2016 |
Common terms and phrases
acres agouti America animal bark Bay of Honduras bird Black River body boiled branches British Settlements brown Browne's History Browne's Natural History Buffon cacao called Cape Captain coast colour Columbian Navigator considerable Corn Island cotton covered cultivated Edwards esteemed expence fathoms feathers feet fermentation fish flavour flesh flowers frequently fruit green ground grows hair harbour head height Henderson's Honduras History of Jamaica Ibid inches long Indians indigo insects island juice kind labour Lagoon land leagues leaves length Linn liquor miles Mosquito nation Mosquito Shore mouth mucilage native neck nine-banded armadillo pimento plant plantation pounds Poyais produce Punta Gorda quantity quito rises root seeds seldom settlers side skin soil South Spaniards Spanish species stalk sugar tail taste thick tree trunk Truxillo turtle vessels West India Atlas West Indies wild wood Wright's Memoir yellow
Popular passages
Page 252 - I proceed to discriminate their relative proportions and value, it may be proper to observe, that the business of sugar planting is a sort of adventure in which the man that engages must engage deeply. — There is no medium, and very seldom the possibility of retreat. A British country gentleman, who is content to jog on without risk on the...
Page 203 - The emerald, the ruby, the topaz, sparkle in its plumage, which is never soiled by the dust of the ground. It inhabits the air; it flutters from flower to flower; it breathes their freshness; it feeds on their nectar, and resides in climates where they blow in perpetual succession.
Page 91 - The fig-tree ; not that kind for fruit renown'd, But such as at this day, to Indians known, In Malabar or Decan spreads her arms Branching so broad and long, that in the ground The bended twigs take root, and daughters grow About the mother tree, a pillar'd shade High over-arch'd, and echoing walks between...
Page 55 - ... and by that glorious planet Venus, which appears here like a little moon, and glitters with fo refulgent a beam as to cafl a (hade from trees, buildings, and other objects, making full amends for the fhort flay and abrupt departure of the crepufculum or twilight fij.
Page 258 - THAT beautiful vegetable wool, or substance called cotton, is the spontaneous production of three parts of the earth. It is found growing naturally in all the tropical regions of Asia, Africa, and America; and may justly be comprehended among the most valuable gifts of a bountiful Creator, superintending and providing for the necessities of man.
Page 54 - ... to harmonize the mind, and produce the most calm and delightful sensations. The moon too in these climates displays far greater radiance than in Europe : the smallest print is legible by her light ; and in the moon's absence her function is not ill supplied by the brightness of the...
Page 53 - The climate of this part of the American continent is greatly superior to that of most other parts of the same vast portion of the globe, either in higher or lower degrees of latitude. It is equally superior to the climate of the West India islands generally, for persons whose health and constitutions have become impaired from the effects of the latter very frequently acquire a sudden restoration of both after an arrival in Honduras.
Page 105 - ... being fallen, the trees are suffered to remain on the ground till they become rotten, and perish. In the course of twelve months after the first season, abundance of young pimento plants will be found growing vigorously in all parts of the land, being, without doubt, produced from ripe berries scattered there by the birds, while the fallen trees, &c., afford them both shelter and shade.
Page 246 - ... cistern, the sides of which are sloped and lined with terras, or boards. Over this cistern there is a frame of massy joist-work without boarding. On the joists of this frame, empty hogsheads, without headings, are ranged. In the bottoms of these hogsheads eight or ten holes are bored, through each of which...
Page 248 - Latin. flour. It is the lees or feculencies of former distillations ; and some few planters preserve it for use, from one crop to another; but this is a bad practice. Some fermented liquor, therefore, composed of sweets and water alone, ought to be distilled in the first instance, that fresh dunder may be obtained. It is a dissolvent menstruum, and certainly occasions the sweets with which it is combined, whether mellasses or scummings, to yield a far greater proportion of spirit than can be obtained...