Narrative of a Voyage Round the World, in the Uranie and Physicienne Corvettes, Commanded by Captain Freycinet, During the Years 1817, 1818, 1819, and 1820 |
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Page 8
... caught our attention . It soon increased with astonishing rapidity , and in a few moments vanished , but again appeared brighter and larger than before . It looked like a distant conflagration which the wind was 8 NARRATIVE OF A.
... caught our attention . It soon increased with astonishing rapidity , and in a few moments vanished , but again appeared brighter and larger than before . It looked like a distant conflagration which the wind was 8 NARRATIVE OF A.
Page 16
... soon as they have earned a certain sum , the most brilliant offers would not induce them to quit the stone or the bench , where they display their stupid pride and their degrading idleness . Can they be called inhabitants of Gibraltar ...
... soon as they have earned a certain sum , the most brilliant offers would not induce them to quit the stone or the bench , where they display their stupid pride and their degrading idleness . Can they be called inhabitants of Gibraltar ...
Page 25
... soon an- nounces to the attentive mariner the impending danger The merry songs have ceased , and are succeeded by an alarming silence . The danger is measured with a glance . The captain speaks ; the men fly to obey his orders . The ...
... soon an- nounces to the attentive mariner the impending danger The merry songs have ceased , and are succeeded by an alarming silence . The danger is measured with a glance . The captain speaks ; the men fly to obey his orders . The ...
Page 37
... can astonish me : as soon as I have perceived the first difference , I must na- turally suppose the others as inevitable consequences . nimous , they were afraid to encounter Philip , their VOYAGE ROUND THE WORLD . 37.
... can astonish me : as soon as I have perceived the first difference , I must na- turally suppose the others as inevitable consequences . nimous , they were afraid to encounter Philip , their VOYAGE ROUND THE WORLD . 37.
Page 50
... soon to give in a church , and on which he meant to expend 6,000 francs ( 2501. ) in tapers , and 10,000 francs ( 4257. ) in fire - works . The more these ceremonies cost , the more favourably those who institute them are received at ...
... soon to give in a church , and on which he meant to expend 6,000 francs ( 2501. ) in tapers , and 10,000 francs ( 4257. ) in fire - works . The more these ceremonies cost , the more favourably those who institute them are received at ...
Other editions - View all
Narrative of a Voyage Round the World, in the Uranie and Physicienne ... Jacques Arago No preview available - 2018 |
Narrative of a Voyage Round the World, in the Uranie and Physicienne ... Jacques Arago No preview available - 2022 |
Narrative of a Voyage Round the World, in the Uranie and Physicienne ... Jacques Arago No preview available - 2022 |
Common terms and phrases
Agagna agreeable already amuse appeared Archipelago arms arrived assagay astonished boat Brasil canoes Cape Captain Freycinet Caroline islands Carolines Carolinians chief coast cocoa-nut colony colours Coupang courage covered customs dances danger death Diely distance elegant enemy Europe excursions expedition eyes fatigue favour fear feet formed frequently Gaimard gave give governor Guam Guanche hand head honour houses inhabitants Island of Guam Isle of Bourbon Isle of France King labour land leagues LETTER Malays manner Marianne islands Medinilla Molucca islands mountains nations natives never obliged observations offer Owhyhee perhaps persons pleasure Port Jackson present priest proas punished rajah regret Riouriou river rocks round sail Saint Victores Sandwich Islands savages scarcely seems seen ship shore slaves soon sovereign strangers Tammeamah thing Timor Tinian told town trees trifling vessel voyage wind Woahoo women young zeal
Popular passages
Page 286 - ... twelve thirteen fourteen fifteen sixteen seventeen eighteen nineteen twenty thirty forty fifty sixty seventy eighty ninety one hundred two hundred three hundred four hundred five hundred...
Page 221 - NNW course, for ten of which there had been, strictly speaking, no land, as the flood made the surrounding country a perfect sea; the banks of the river were heavily timbered; and many large spaces within our view, covered with the common reed, were also encircled by large trees.
Page 222 - ... over the plain of reeds which surrounded us ; the river decreasing in depth from upwards of twenty feet, to less than five feet, and flowing over a bottom of tenacious blue mud ; and the current still running with nearly the same rapidity, as when the water was confined within the banks of the river. This point of junction with interior waters, or where the Macquarie ceased to have the form of a river, is in latitude 30° 45" south, and longitude 147" 10
Page 223 - August, and finding I was surrounded by bogs, I was reluctantly compelled to take a more easterly course, having practically proved that the country could not be traversed on any point deviating from the main range of hills which bound the interior ; although partial dry portions of level alluvial land...
Page 222 - ... barren wet marsh, overrun with a species of polygonum, and not offering a single dry spot to which our course might be directed ; and, that there was no probability of finding any in that direction, I had a certain knowledge from the observations made during the former expedition. «« To circle the flooded country to the...
Page 217 - ... through a perfectly level country, barren in the extreme, and being evidently at periods entirely under water. To this point it had been gradually diminishing, and spreading its waters over stagnated lagoons and morasses, without receiving any stream that we knew of during the whole extent of its course. The banks were not more than three feet high, and the marks of flood on the shrubs and bushes...
Page 87 - I have seen," says a recent French traveller, " yes, I have myself seen, two young ladies (of Rio) whose countenances wore the expression of mildness and benevolence, endeavour by way of pastime, to cut, at a certain distance, with a whip, the face of a negro whom they had ordered not to stir from the spot. This exercise seemed to amuse them. I would mention their names, if their father, who came in after the first essay, had not severely reprimanded them for their cruelty.
Page 225 - I should have hesitated to have attempted the passage, without assistance to the sea-ward. As it is, we are indebted for our preservation, and that of the horses, to the providential discovery of a small boat on the beach, which the men with the most cheerful alacrity carried upwards of ninety miles on their shoulders, thereby enabling us to overcome obstacles otherwise insurmountable. Until within these few days, I hoped to have had the satisfaction to report the return of the expedition without...
Page 221 - ... this port to-day ; and circumstances rendering it necessary that Mr Evans should proceed to Newcastle, I embrace the opportunity to make to your Excellency a brief report of the route pursued by the western expedition entrusted to my direction.
Page 222 - To assert positively that we were on the margin of the lake or sea into which this great body of water is discharged, might reasonably be deemed a conclusion which has nothing but conjecture for its basis ; but if an opinion may be permitted to be hazarded from actual appearances, mine is decidedly in favour of our being in the immediate vicinity of an inland sea, or lake, most probably a shoal one, and gradually filling up by immense depositions from the...