The Bungalow and the Tent; Or, a Visit to Ceylon |
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Page 16
... or whether it is the island of Taprobăne , mentioned by Ovid , to the passing traveller it is probably a * * Ex . Pont . 8 - Ec . 5. v . 80 . matter of considerable indifference . He cannot help remarking , 16 THE BUNGALOW.
... or whether it is the island of Taprobăne , mentioned by Ovid , to the passing traveller it is probably a * * Ex . Pont . 8 - Ec . 5. v . 80 . matter of considerable indifference . He cannot help remarking , 16 THE BUNGALOW.
Page 17
... considerable difficulty in effecting any insurance under 100 per cent . With the exception of the old Dutch fort , ( which answers very well the purpose for which such buildings seem to serve in the colonies , namely , that of keeping ...
... considerable difficulty in effecting any insurance under 100 per cent . With the exception of the old Dutch fort , ( which answers very well the purpose for which such buildings seem to serve in the colonies , namely , that of keeping ...
Page 27
... considerable rapidity . When seen at a short distance the ropes are in- visible , and the curious effect is produced of a man crossing from tree to tree at a height of fifty or sixty feet from the ground , without any visible means of ...
... considerable rapidity . When seen at a short distance the ropes are in- visible , and the curious effect is produced of a man crossing from tree to tree at a height of fifty or sixty feet from the ground , without any visible means of ...
Page 30
... considerable amount of fever to the neighbourhood ; in fact , I doubt whether any advantage would be sufficient to induce a West Indian to locate in such a position . How- ever , Ceylon , in the matter of climate , stands per se , and ...
... considerable amount of fever to the neighbourhood ; in fact , I doubt whether any advantage would be sufficient to induce a West Indian to locate in such a position . How- ever , Ceylon , in the matter of climate , stands per se , and ...
Page 31
... considerable portion of the noxious exhalations , that would otherwise poison the neighbourhood . The banks of rivers , on the contrary , are rife with fever : the cause assigned for it is , that during the rainy seasons they swell to a ...
... considerable portion of the noxious exhalations , that would otherwise poison the neighbourhood . The banks of rivers , on the contrary , are rife with fever : the cause assigned for it is , that during the rainy seasons they swell to a ...
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Common terms and phrases
agreeable alligators amongst amusement animal ants Apoo appearance attack Badula beautiful betel breakfast Buddhist buffalo bungalow camp caste certainly Ceylon cheroot Cingalese cobra cocoa-nut coffee Colombo companions considerable coolies danger death destroy disgust distance doubt elephant England entirely especially excessively excitement fancy feet female fever fire forest former fruit grass ground half hand head heard herd horsekeeper horses human hundred imagine immediately India island jungle Kandians Kandy labour land legs Malabar Malabar coast Malay miles milk monkeys Moormen morning natives nature never Newera Elia night paddy fields Pariah dogs party passed patna peculiar perfectly phants Point de Galle present probably Punchy quadruped race reason remarkable resembling Rifle band river road scarcely seen shooting shot Sir Edward Barnes snakes sport supposed Tamul tank tion trackers trees tropical trunk turn Veddahs village whilst yards
Popular passages
Page 233 - Dan shall be a serpent by the way, An adder in the path, That biteth the horse heels, So that his rider shall fall backward.
Page 17 - The men of Dedan were thy merchants ; Many isles were the merchandise of thine hand ; They brought thee for a present horns of ivory, and ebony.
Page 31 - Whilst the vicinity of tanks and lagoons of the most fetid and aguish character is perfectly healthy, that of rivers is equally deadly. The apparent contradiction of the usual laws of nature is accounted for by two reasons. The tanks are covered with various kinds of aquatic plants, which, by a kind Providence, are made to serve not only as filterers and purifiers of the water itself, but even as consumers of a considerable portion of the noxious exhalations that would otherwise poison the neighborhood.
Page 31 - ... intricate nature of their course, the streams are unable to clear themselves, and this accumulation is left to decay in its bed and infest the surrounding country. There exists also another reason: the beds of the Ceylon rivers are almost invariably composed of sand, and the stream, instead of sweeping down the decomposed vegetable matter it holds in its waters, as must be the case in hard-bedded rivers, percolates through the sand, leaving the poisonous matter on the surface 'exposed to the...
Page 228 - Shaggy, and lean, and shrewd, with pointed ears And tail cropped short, half lurcher and half cur, His dog attends him.
Page 30 - ... in fact, I doubt whether any advantage would induce a West Indian to locate in such a position. "However, in the matter of climate, Ceylon stands per se, and offers a total antithesis as regards the healthiness of certain districts of most other tropical countries.
Page 87 - With that same vaunted name, Virginity. Beauty is Nature's coin; must not be hoarded, But must be current; and the good thereof Consists in mutual and partaken bliss, Unsavoury in the enjoyment of itself.
Page 30 - A large fresh-water lagoon, of a most green, slimy, tropical appearance, producing in abundance a lotus of almost Victoria Regia magnificence, stretches away to the back of the fort, and around are situated the bungalows of many of the Colombo merchants. The propinquity of this lake would, in any other tropical country...
Page 31 - The banks of the river, on the contrary, are rife with fever; the cause assigned is, that during the rainy seasons they swell to a great size, and collect the vegetable matter of a large extent of country; but owing to the rapidity with which they fall at the commencement of the dry season, and the winding and intricate nature of their course, the streams are unable to clear themselves, and this accumulation is left to decay in its bed and infest the surrounding country. There exists also another...
Page 84 - ... excessive tightness of their comboys or petticoats, which confine the free movements of their hips almost as completely as tight straps do, or did (for perhaps the fashion has changed), the shoulders of our fashionable ladies in England. Although this description of plainness is very general in its application, there were some few young ladies who really were not hideous, and who, but for their beastly and universal habit of chewing betel, would have been quite tolerable. The women appear to...