Pictorial History of China and India: Comprising a Description of Those Countries and Their Inhabitants from the Earliest Period of Authentic Record, to the Present TimeRobert Sears |
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Page 5
... frequently exemplified , than on the extensive plains of Hindostan . The exploits of the conquerors who made it the object of their warlike expeditions , as also the splendid productions of nature and art which were thence obtained ...
... frequently exemplified , than on the extensive plains of Hindostan . The exploits of the conquerors who made it the object of their warlike expeditions , as also the splendid productions of nature and art which were thence obtained ...
Page 23
... frequently at war with each other , so that the empire was but seldom quite at peace . The education of youth was considered of so much importance , that every district was obliged by law to maintain a public school , to which boys were ...
... frequently at war with each other , so that the empire was but seldom quite at peace . The education of youth was considered of so much importance , that every district was obliged by law to maintain a public school , to which boys were ...
Page 30
... frequent hostile incursions into the Chinese territo ries . They were the same people who , in European history , are ... frequently adopted by monarchs of much later ages , and of countries esteemed infinitely more civilized than China ...
... frequent hostile incursions into the Chinese territo ries . They were the same people who , in European history , are ... frequently adopted by monarchs of much later ages , and of countries esteemed infinitely more civilized than China ...
Page 37
... frequently bestowed on men of rank , with people to cultivate them , who were bound to the soil , and who were , to a certain extent , slaves : but it is not very clear how far the authority of their masters extended , how large a ...
... frequently bestowed on men of rank , with people to cultivate them , who were bound to the soil , and who were , to a certain extent , slaves : but it is not very clear how far the authority of their masters extended , how large a ...
Page 41
... frequent among the poor of other countries , if it were disre- garded by the law , as it is in China . In ancient times the law of primogeniture existed among the Chinese , and remained in force until the reign of the Emperor Ou - ti ...
... frequent among the poor of other countries , if it were disre- garded by the law , as it is in China . In ancient times the law of primogeniture existed among the Chinese , and remained in force until the reign of the Emperor Ou - ti ...
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Common terms and phrases
Afghan Akber ancient appear army Aurengzebe bamboo beautiful Bengal Bramins British government Cabul called Canton capital carried celebrated ceremony Chanda Sahib chief China Chinese Christian command Confucius conquest consequence court cultivated death Deccan Delhi district dominions dynasty emperor emperor of China empire English European extended father foreign governor Hindostan Hindu hundred Hyder Ali imperial India inhabitants island Khan king kingdom Kublai Khan ladies Lahore land laws length Lord Gough Mahrattas mandarins ment merchants miles Ming dynasty minister Mogul Mogul empire Mohammed Mohammedan monarch mountains Nanking nation native Ningpo occasion officers opium palace peishwa Peking possession prince principal prisoners province raja Rajputs rank received reign residence rice river Seiks sent Sevajee Shah Shah Jehan silk Singh soldiers soon sovereign Tartar temples territories thousand throne tion took town trade treaty troops viceroy villages walls whole zamorin
Popular passages
Page 351 - IT IS TRUE, I CANNOT PREVENT THE INTRODUCTION OF THE FLOWING POISON; GAIN-SEEKING AND CORRUPT MEN WILL, FOR PROFIT AND SENSUALITY, DEFEAT MY WISHES ; BUT NOTHING WILL INDUCE ME TO DERIVE A REVENUE FROM THE VICE AND MISERY OF MY PEOPLE.
Page 572 - Delhi, until, in 1739, the empire received its fatal blow from the invasion of Nadir Shah. Among the spoils of conquest which the Persian warrior carried back with him in triumph to Khorassan, and which have been variously estimated as worth from...
Page 349 - The pain they suffer when deprived of the drug, after long habit, no language can explain ; and it is only when to a certain degree under its influence that their faculties are alive. In the...
Page 572 - June, 1813, was fixed as the day when the great diamond of the Moguls should be surrendered by the Abdallee chief to the ascendant dynasty of the Singhs. The two princes met in a room appointed for the purpose, and took their seats on the ground. A solemn silence then ensued, which continued unbroken for an hour. At length Runjeet's impatience overcame the suggestions of Asiatic decorum, and he whispered to an attendant to quicken the memory of the Shah. The exiled prince spoke not a word in reply,...
Page 349 - ... office. A few days of this fearful luxury, when taken to excess, will give a pallid and haggard look to the face ; and a few months, or even weeks, will change the strong and healthy man into little better than an idiot skeleton. The pain they suffer when deprived of the drug, after long habit, no language can explain...
Page 193 - Chinese regard it as one of their richest and most beautiful cities, and have a saying, " that to be happy on earth, one must be born in Soochow-foo, live in Canton, and die in Liauchau ;" for in the first are the handsomest people, in the second the richest luxuries, and in the third the best coffins.
Page 202 - ... dollars, and are retained in bondage until worn out by disease and profligacy ; they are then turned adrift by their vile owners, with scarcely sufficient covering for their bodies to protect them from the weather, or answer the purpose of common decency.
Page 348 - I had the curiosity to visit, was the opium-smoker in his heaven ; and certainly it is a most fearful sight, although perhaps not so degrading to the eye as the drunkard from spirits, lowered to the level of the brute and wallowing in his filth. The...
Page 189 - Peking are seldom more than one story in height, and have flat roofs, which are often covered with flowers and shrubs ; for as there are no fire-places, so there are no chimneys, the rooms being warmed by pans of lighted charcoal, of which fuel great quantities are brought from Tartary on dromedaries, and these animals are constantly seen thus laden in the streets of the city. The new town was partly built, and greatly embellished, by the Emperor...
Page 591 - The consequence of my long and uninterrupted researches into religious truth (he says in this letter) has been, that I have found the doctrines of Christ more conducive to moral principles, and better adapted for the use of rational beings, than any other which have come to my knowledge...