The Library of American BiographyHarper & bros., 1847 - United States |
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Page viii
... of Religion upon them . - Peculiarities of Features in the Tar- tar Countenance . - Difficulty of taking Vo- cabularies of unknown Languages . Classi- - fication of the Tartars and North American Indians . Causes viii CONTENTS .
... of Religion upon them . - Peculiarities of Features in the Tar- tar Countenance . - Difficulty of taking Vo- cabularies of unknown Languages . Classi- - fication of the Tartars and North American Indians . Causes viii CONTENTS .
Page ix
Jared Sparks. fication of the Tartars and North American Indians . Causes of the Difference of Color in the Human Race . Tartars and Amer- ican Indians the same People . - 295 CHAPTER XL Climate in Siberia . Particulars concerning that ...
Jared Sparks. fication of the Tartars and North American Indians . Causes of the Difference of Color in the Human Race . Tartars and Amer- ican Indians the same People . - 295 CHAPTER XL Climate in Siberia . Particulars concerning that ...
Page 14
... of his day in the cause of the Indians , her joy was complete . From the first settlement of the country much zeal and much disinterested philan- thropy have been exercised , in attempts to convert the 14 AMERICAN BIOGRAPHY .
... of his day in the cause of the Indians , her joy was complete . From the first settlement of the country much zeal and much disinterested philan- thropy have been exercised , in attempts to convert the 14 AMERICAN BIOGRAPHY .
Page 15
... caused the journals of his missionary tours to be read throughout the country , his labors ap- plauded , and his success regarded as an evi- dence of the great work , that might be wrought by the proper use of means . About this time ...
... caused the journals of his missionary tours to be read throughout the country , his labors ap- plauded , and his success regarded as an evi- dence of the great work , that might be wrought by the proper use of means . About this time ...
Page 29
... causes us to read his last af- fecting letter to his wife with emotions of sympathy more intense , if possible ... cause , attempting to ex- plore the hidden regions of Africa . CHAPTER II . - - Commences the Study of Theology JOHN ...
... causes us to read his last af- fecting letter to his wife with emotions of sympathy more intense , if possible ... cause , attempting to ex- plore the hidden regions of Africa . CHAPTER II . - - Commences the Study of Theology JOHN ...
Common terms and phrases
acquainted adventure Africa America appear arrived Asia Asiatic Barnaoul boats Buretti Cairo canoe Captain Cook character chief circumstances civilized Commandant continent Cook's custom discovery dress Empress England enterprise expedition favor friends heart human hundred Indians inhabitants Irkutsk islands JOHN LEDYARD journal journey Kalmuks Kamtschatka Kazan kind land language Ledyard letter London manner 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 resemblance respect river River Kolyma Russian sail savage says season seen Sennaar sent ship shore Siberia skins snow Society Islands soon Southold suppose tain Tartars Teraiobu thence thought tion Tobolsk town traveller tribes versts vessel voyage winter wishes write Yakuti Yakutsk Yenissey Zealand
Popular passages
Page 385 - So geographers, in Afric maps, With savage pictures fill their gaps, And o'er unhabitable downs Place elephants for want of towns.
Page 342 - With man it has often been otherwise. In wandering over the barren plains of inhospitable Denmark, through honest Sweden, and frozen Lapland, rude and...
Page 418 - ... and 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...
Page 112 - As soon as I was rendered warm and comfortable, a table was set before me with a lamp upon it ; all the Russians in the house sat down round me, and the bottles of spirits, tobacco, snuff, and whatever Perpheela had, were brought and set upon it ; these I presented to the company, intimating that they were presents from Commodore Cook, who was an Englishman. One of the company then gave me to understand, that all the white people I saw there were subjects of the Empress Catherine of Russia, and rose...
Page 249 - 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 297 - ... kindred greetings with all on earth, that bear the stamp of man. This is the third time, that I have been overtaken and arrested by winter ; and both the others, by giving time for my evil genius to rally his hosts about me, have defeated the enterprise. Fortune, thou hast humbled me at last, for I am this moment the slave of cowardly solicitude, lest in the heart of this dread winter, there lurk the seeds of disappointment to my ardent desire of gaining the opposite continent. But I submit.
Page 95 - 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 374 - 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 194 - I have been so much the sport of accident," said he, "that I am exceedingly suspicious. It is true, that in this L'Orient negotiation, I have guarded every avenue to future disappointment, with all possible caution; yet this head I wear, is so much a dupe to my heart, and at other times my heart is so bewildered by my head, that in matters of business I have not much confidence in either.
Page 143 - 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 prisoner, until his...