The Asiatic Journal and Monthly Register for British and Foreign India, China, and AustraliaParbury, Allen, and Company, 1841 - Asia |
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Page 9
... taken place , and also that the people were determined , if possible , to force an entrance . Two of the officers were bleeding from the face , having been wounded by the spikes with which the peasants in the island urge on their loaded ...
... taken place , and also that the people were determined , if possible , to force an entrance . Two of the officers were bleeding from the face , having been wounded by the spikes with which the peasants in the island urge on their loaded ...
Page 20
... taken to compel the repayment of about £ 40,000 by Mr. Hastings into the public treasury without delay . The example of Nuncomar , and the avidity with which the Council lis- tened to the most improbable charges against a man marked ...
... taken to compel the repayment of about £ 40,000 by Mr. Hastings into the public treasury without delay . The example of Nuncomar , and the avidity with which the Council lis- tened to the most improbable charges against a man marked ...
Page 36
... taken . In the mean time , " it is said that Yaou ke , after having ascended the bank , hastened to Fuh wang tsze's house , only deeming it necessary just to announce his name and desire to arrange about his daughter . As soon as he had ...
... taken . In the mean time , " it is said that Yaou ke , after having ascended the bank , hastened to Fuh wang tsze's house , only deeming it necessary just to announce his name and desire to arrange about his daughter . As soon as he had ...
Page 58
... taken place , and my progress to the north was consequently stopped , and a movement in any direction was attended with great danger in the excited state of the country , and from the well - known general feeling in favour of the young ...
... taken place , and my progress to the north was consequently stopped , and a movement in any direction was attended with great danger in the excited state of the country , and from the well - known general feeling in favour of the young ...
Page 59
... taken by the latter , whose couch was placed by night under the Derwaza Dil Dar , was to be on the alert , to patrol the ramparts , and to be ready to give assistance to any point attacked . " On the succeeding morn , the enemy appeared ...
... taken by the latter , whose couch was placed by night under the Derwaza Dil Dar , was to be on the alert , to patrol the ramparts , and to be ready to give assistance to any point attacked . " On the succeeding morn , the enemy appeared ...
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affairs agent appeared appointed April army arrived artillery Assist authorities Batavia Bengal Bocca Tigris Bombay Government brahmins Brev British Government Calcutta Canton Cape Capt Captain Carnac Ceylon character charge chief China Chinese Colonel command Company conduct Council Court of Directors daughter despatch ditto duty East-India Elphinstone enemy English Ensign estab evidence ex-rajah favour Governor Governor-General Governor-General of India guilty guns hear Herat honour India Infantry island jagheers justice Khan Khelat king lady late letter Lieut Lodwick Lord Lord Auckland Loveday Madras Mahomed Major Malacca Malay March Mauritius ment N. S. Wales native Nuncomar officers opinion papers party Penang Perak person possession present prince proceedings proprietor Quedah Quetta Raena Rajah of Sattara received regiment regt resident sent Shah Shah Nawaz Khan ship Siam Siamese Singapore Sir Robert Grant steamer Surg tion treaty troops whole
Popular passages
Page 151 - Sir, — I have the honour to acquaint you, for the information of the Lords Commissioners of the Admiralty, that...
Page 345 - For Brutus is an honourable man; So are they all, all honourable men Come I to speak in Caesar's funeral. He was my friend, faithful and just to me; But Brutus says he was ambitious, And Brutus is an honourable man.
Page 56 - have less opportunity than might be expected of forming opinions of the native character. Even in England, few know much of the people beyond their own class, and what they do know, they learn from newspapers and publications of a description which does not exist in India. In that country also, religion and manners put bars to our intimacy with the natives, and limit the number of transactions as well as the free communication of opinions. We know nothing of the interior of families but by report,...
Page 80 - That eagle's fate and mine are one, Which, on the shaft that made him die, Espied a feather of his own, Wherewith he wont to soar so high. Had Echo, with so sweet a grace, Narcissus' loud complaints returned, Not for reflection of his face, But of his voice, the boy had burned.
Page 108 - I was gratified by receiving a dispatch from him, reporting, that on their arrival off the first bar, the enemy were observed strongly fortified on the left bank of the river, close to Whampoa reach, with upwards of forty war-junks, and the...
Page 285 - Week, 1841, the following Declaration was agreed to by all present:— We, the undersigned Archbishops and Bishops of the United Church of England and Ireland, contemplate with deep concern the insufficient provision which has been hitherto made for the spiritual care of the members of our National Church residing in the British Colonies and in distant parts of the world, especially as it regards the want of a systematic superintendence of the clergy...
Page 285 - ... of our National Church residing in the British Colonies, and in distant parts of the world, especially as it regards the want of a systematic superintendence of the Clergy, and the absence of those ordinances, the administration of which is committed to the Episcopal order. We therefore hold it to be our duty, in compliance with the Resolutions of a Meeting, convened by the Archbishop of Canterbury, on the 27th of April last, to undertake the charge of the Fund for the Endowment of Additional...
Page 119 - I now saw that attempt at flight was useless, and, expecting a fate similar to that of my Lascar, I set to work to make the rascals pay for it, and fought my best — numbers of course prevailed, and I was knocked down.
Page 35 - ... free exercise of their religious rites, ceremonies, and social customs, and in the enjoyment of their lawful private property and interests. They will be governed, pending her majesty's further pleasure, according to the laws, customs, and usages of the Chinese (every description of torture excepted...
Page 29 - Trampling his path through wood and brake, And canes which crackling fall before his way, And tassel-grass, whose silvery feathers play O'ertopping the young trees, On comes the Elephant, to slake His thirst at noon in yon pellucid springs. Lo ! from his trunk upturn'd, aloft he flings The grateful ' shower ; and now Plucking the broad-leaved bough Of yonder plane, with wavey motion slow, Fanning the languid air, He moves it to and fro.