Silver Mines and Incidents of Travel: Letters and Notes on Sea and LandT. Wilson, printer, 1893 - 314 páginas |
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Página 19
... head covered with a greasy old cap that looks venerable from long service , and our feet covered with a pair of old slippers ; if of carpet , threadbare , or if of leather , long since bereft of the polished face . The cap is necessary ...
... head covered with a greasy old cap that looks venerable from long service , and our feet covered with a pair of old slippers ; if of carpet , threadbare , or if of leather , long since bereft of the polished face . The cap is necessary ...
Página 20
... head reaches the roof . Here are two men turning away at a winch , wind- ing up stones and metals , as it were , from the bottom of a chimney . What a strange wheel of fortune is theirs ! To stand over that dark pit 1,000 feet below the ...
... head reaches the roof . Here are two men turning away at a winch , wind- ing up stones and metals , as it were , from the bottom of a chimney . What a strange wheel of fortune is theirs ! To stand over that dark pit 1,000 feet below the ...
Página 21
... heads from dashing against the sides , wondering what is about to happen when a slight shock is given to the bucket , which bangs against the rock and stops for a moment , as if preparing to tumble us down to the bottom . Absorbed with ...
... heads from dashing against the sides , wondering what is about to happen when a slight shock is given to the bucket , which bangs against the rock and stops for a moment , as if preparing to tumble us down to the bottom . Absorbed with ...
Página 29
... , in the light of the clear moon , deliberately taking down the red - hot doors of the fur- nace . The man was too much terrified to stir . He watched the old Devil put his head and shoulders into the SILVER MINING . 29.
... , in the light of the clear moon , deliberately taking down the red - hot doors of the fur- nace . The man was too much terrified to stir . He watched the old Devil put his head and shoulders into the SILVER MINING . 29.
Página 30
Letters and Notes on Sea and Land Henry Swinglehurst. the old Devil put his head and shoulders into the furnace and take away two fine Pinas . On recovering himself , he called up the people of the works and told how el diablo , clothed ...
Letters and Notes on Sea and Land Henry Swinglehurst. the old Devil put his head and shoulders into the furnace and take away two fine Pinas . On recovering himself , he called up the people of the works and told how el diablo , clothed ...
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Términos y frases comunes
alpaca amalgam amongst Arequipa Arica arrived beautiful blue Bolivia cajon Callao calm Cape Horn Captain cents Chañarcillo Chile Chilian church clouds colour Copiapó Coquimbo cost cotton dark dear deck desert dollars England English feel feet friends ground Guano half head HENRY SWINGLEHURST hills Hincaster horse hundred inches island Islay Juan Godoy knots labour ladies land light Lima lofty looking marks mercury metals metres miles mineral mines moon morning mountains native nice night ocean Panama Panama Railway passed Paul Veronese perhaps Peru Peruvian picture port railway river rocks sail Saint Saint Mark seemed seen shaft ship shore side silver sleep Spain Spanish steamer stone Tacna Titien to-day trade trees Valparaiso varas veins vessel whilst wind yards
Pasajes populares
Página 227 - When the devil was sick, the devil a monk would be, When the devil was well, the devil a monk was he.
Página 297 - Lo, the poor Indian! whose untutor'd mind Sees God in clouds, or hears him in the wind; His soul, proud science never taught to stray Far as the solar walk, or milky way...
Página 63 - He that is surety for a stranger shall smart for it: and he that hateth suretyship is sure.
Página 181 - ... intention to injure us. We ought rather to meet the anticipated danger by a diligent cultivation, and prudent management, of our own resources. We ought to conciliate the respect and good will of other nations, and secure their assistance in case of need, by the benevolence and justice of our conduct. War is not to be resorted to without absolute necessity, nor unless peace would be more dangerous, and more miserable, than war itself.
Página 153 - ... heats it again, and but for your awnings, and the little air put in circulation by the continual flapping of the ship's sails, it would be almost insufferable. No person who has not crossed this region can form an adequate idea of its unpleasant effects.
Página 153 - ... of the ship's sails, it would be almost insufferable. No person who has not crossed this region can form an adequate idea of its unpleasant effects. You feel a degree of lassitude unconquerable, which not even the sea-bathing, which everywhere else proves so salutary and renovating, can dispel. Except when in actual danger of shipwreck, I never spent twelve more disagreeable days in the professional part of my life, than in these calm latitudes.
Página 181 - ... individual member of a state, is a just cause of war, if redress be refused, but a nation is not bound to go to war on so slight a foundation ; for it may of itself grant indemnity to the injured party, and if this cannot be done, yet the good of the whole is to be preferred to the welfare of a part.b Every milder method of redress is to be tried, before the nation makes an appeal to arms ; and this is the sage and moral precept of the writers on natural law.
Página 153 - ... flapping of the ship's sails, it would be almost insufferable. No person who has not crossed this region can form an adequate idea of its unpleasant effects. You feel a degree of lassitude unconquerable, which not even the sea-bathing, which every where else proves so salutary and renovating, can dispel.
Página 76 - I am Saint Mark, the patron of Venice ! I learned to-night that the Devils, assembled in council at Lido, in the Jews...