The Library of American Biography, Volume 24Hilliard, Gray, 1847 - United States |
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Page ix
... Human Race . Tartars and Amer- ican Indians the same People . - CHAPTER XI . - • Climate in Siberia . Particulars concerning that Country . - Ledyard's celebrated Eulogy on Women . - - Captain Billings meets him at Russian Yakutsk ...
... Human Race . Tartars and Amer- ican Indians the same People . - CHAPTER XI . - • Climate in Siberia . Particulars concerning that Country . - Ledyard's celebrated Eulogy on Women . - - Captain Billings meets him at Russian Yakutsk ...
Page 20
... humanity , should be so soon brought to an end , and nothing be seen in the result but a melancholy waste of time , talents , and money . Much Such was the condition of a missionary among the Indians , and such the origin and purpose of ...
... humanity , should be so soon brought to an end , and nothing be seen in the result but a melancholy waste of time , talents , and money . Much Such was the condition of a missionary among the Indians , and such the origin and purpose of ...
Page 45
... human life , it is not surprising that he should feel himself hanging loosely upon society , and should discover that , while he continued with- out purpose and without property , he would exhibit slender claims to the respect of the ...
... human life , it is not surprising that he should feel himself hanging loosely upon society , and should discover that , while he continued with- out purpose and without property , he would exhibit slender claims to the respect of the ...
Page 47
... human kind . Ledyard's thoughts were now gay ; for , al- though in beggary , he fancied that the next step would place him at the summit of his wishes , and open to him wide the door of prosperity . Had he possessed the very lamp of ...
... human kind . Ledyard's thoughts were now gay ; for , al- though in beggary , he fancied that the next step would place him at the summit of his wishes , and open to him wide the door of prosperity . Had he possessed the very lamp of ...
Page 60
... human be- ings , wearing no clothes , and carrying with them nothing but a rude stick about three feet long , and sharpened at one end . Their skin was black , hair curly , and the beards of the men , as well as their hair , besmeared ...
... human be- ings , wearing no clothes , and carrying with them nothing but a rude stick about three feet long , and sharpened at one end . Their skin was black , hair curly , and the beards of the men , as well as their hair , besmeared ...
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Common terms and phrases
acquainted Africa America appear arrived Asia Asiatic boats Cairo canoe Captain Cook character chief circumstances Colonel Smith Commandant continent Cook's custom discovery dress enterprise expedition express favor Fezzan friends guineas heart human hundred Indians inhabitants Irkutsk islands JOHN LEDYARD journal journey Kalmuks Kamtschatka kind land language leave Ledyard Lena letter London manner Marquis Marquis de Lafayette ment miles mind Mongul months natives nature never Nootka Sound North Northwest Coast observed Ocean Okotsk Otaheite Pacific Ocean Pallas Paris passed person Petersburg Poulaho procure remarkable respect river River Kolyma Russian sail savage says season seen Sennaar sent ship shore Siberia Sir Joseph skin snow Society Islands Southold suppose Swedish Lapland tain Tartars things thought tion Tobolsk town traveller tribes versts vessel voyage winter wishes write wrote Yakuti Yakutsk Yenissey Zealand
Popular passages
Page 335 - So geographers, in Afric maps, With savage pictures fill their gaps, And o'er unhabitable downs Place elephants for want of towns.
Page 324 - Before I had learnt from the note the name and business of my visitor, I was struck with the manliness of his person, the breadth of his chest, the openness of his countenance, and the inquietude of his eye.
Page 368 - ... that his manners, though unpolished, were neither uncivil nor unpleasing. Little attentive to difference of rank, he seemed to consider all men as his equals, and as such he respected them. His genius, though uncultivated and irregular, was original and comprehensive. Ardent in his wishes, yet calm in his deliberations ; daring in his purposes, but guarded in his measures ; impatient of control, yet capable of strong endurance ; adventurous beyond the conception of ordinary men, yet wary and...
Page 237 - He is an accomplished man, and my friend, and has travelled throughout European and Asiatic Russia. I find the little French I have, of infinite service to me. I could not do without it. It is a most extraordinary language. I believe wolves, rocks, woods, and snow understand it, for I have addressed them all in it, and they have all been very complaisant to me. We had a Scythian at table, who belongs to the Royal Society of Physicians here. The moment he knew me and my designs, he became my friend...
Page 229 - The sea, at first smooth and even, became more and more rugged and unequal. It assumed, as we proceeded, an undulating appearance, resembling the waves by which it had been agitated. At length we met with masses of ice heaped one upon the other, and some of them seeming as if they were suspended in the air, while others were raised in the forms of pyramids.
Page 83 - I had no sooner beheld these Americans, than I set them down for the same kind of people, that inhabit the opposite side of the continent.
Page 235 - I cannot tell you by what means I came to Petersburg, and hardly know by what means I shall quit it in the further prosecution of my tour round the world by land.
Page 324 - from the note the name and business of my visitor, I was struck with the manliness of his person, the breadth of his chest, the openness of his countenance, and the inquietude of his eye. I spread the map of Africa before him, and tracing a line from Cairo to Sennaar, and from thence westward in the latitude and supposed direction of the Niger, I told him that was the route by which I was anxious that Africa might, if possible, be explored. He said he should think himself singularly fortunate to...
Page 131 - On the thirteenth, at night, the Discovery's large cutter, which was at her usual moorings at the bower buoy, was taken away. On the fourteenth the captains met to consult what should be done on this alarming occasion ; and the issue of their opinions was, that one of the two captains should land with armed boats and a guard of marines at Kiverua, and attempt to persuade Teraiobu, who was then at his house in that town, to come on board upon a visit, and that when he was on board he should be kept...
Page 280 - The equally distinguishing characteristic of feature, in the Tartar face, invites me into a field of observation, which I am not able at present to give bounds to. I must therefore resign it to those who have leisure and a taste for such inquiries, contenting myself with furnishing a few facts, and describing this strange dissimilarity in the human face, according to the observations I have made. This I should be able to do anatomically; but I am not. The Tartar face, in the first impression it gives,...