Notes of Wanderings in the Himmala: Containing Descriptions of Some of the Grandest Scenery of the Snowy Range; Among Others of Nainee Tal |
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Page 8
... ridge of the Mana Pass , from which the plains of Tartary are first visible , is eighteen thousand feet , leaving an ascent of seven thousand feet . The only way I could think of , for making them comprehend what I wanted , was to ask ...
... ridge of the Mana Pass , from which the plains of Tartary are first visible , is eighteen thousand feet , leaving an ascent of seven thousand feet . The only way I could think of , for making them comprehend what I wanted , was to ask ...
Page 10
... ridges we have had to pass over . On two or three occasions , we have just escaped it , and no more . For the last fifteen days , there has not been one , without heavy falls of snow on every mountain around us . I know not what kind of ...
... ridges we have had to pass over . On two or three occasions , we have just escaped it , and no more . For the last fifteen days , there has not been one , without heavy falls of snow on every mountain around us . I know not what kind of ...
Page 22
... ridge parallel to a river below us , called the Aglar , a tributary of the Jumna , for a few miles ; after which we descended to it , and continued up its valley to the village of Bhal . Before descending to the Aglar river , there is a ...
... ridge parallel to a river below us , called the Aglar , a tributary of the Jumna , for a few miles ; after which we descended to it , and continued up its valley to the village of Bhal . Before descending to the Aglar river , there is a ...
Page 29
... ridge of hills in which the Aglar river has its source , and afterwards make about an equal descent on the opposite side , to the village of Bekoola ; nothing of sufficient interest to commit to paper having occurred . This ridge ...
... ridge of hills in which the Aglar river has its source , and afterwards make about an equal descent on the opposite side , to the village of Bekoola ; nothing of sufficient interest to commit to paper having occurred . This ridge ...
Page 33
... ridge of mountains overhanging the river on the east side . We had , on the 26th , descended the limit of the ridge which separates the Jumna and its tributaries from the Bageerut , and now we had to ascend a similar ridge separ- rating ...
... ridge of mountains overhanging the river on the east side . We had , on the 26th , descended the limit of the ridge which separates the Jumna and its tributaries from the Bageerut , and now we had to ascend a similar ridge separ- rating ...
Other editions - View all
Notes of Wanderings in the Himmala: Containing Descriptions of Some of the ... No preview available - 2020 |
Notes of Wanderings in the Himmala: Containing Descriptions of Some of the ... T. J. Saunders No preview available - 2016 |
Common terms and phrases
Almora appearance ascent Ayapatta Bageerut BAGMAN banks Bareilly Batten beautiful Beemtal Bhotias Billung Budreenath bungalow called camp Chilkeea Chinese Tartary commenced CONTENTS OF CHAPTER crossed cultivation day's journey descend Dhoon distance encamped European forest Ganges Goorkha Government ground Gungootree Gurhwal half Hawulbagh height hill Himmala Hindoo hundred Kalee Kaleedoongee Kasheepoor Kedar Kedarnath Kedarnath temple Kotha Kumaon Ladakh lake Landour Lohoo Ghaut look Mana Pass miles months moonal Moradabad mountain Mussooree Nainee Nainee Tal Nath natives nearly never Nynee Nynee Tal October palkee Pass peaks Petora Gurh pheasant Pilgrim plains Polgurh Province puharees rain reached residents ridge road route Rupees scenery season Seva shew side sight Sikhs Simla snow snowy range Sreenuggur station stone stream suspension bridge Sutledge temple territories thing thousand feet tion torrent Traill traveller trees turaee valley viâ village Vishnoo Gunga whole
Popular passages
Page 90 - God made the earth and the heavens, and every plant of the field before it was in the earth, and every herb of the field before it grew : for the Lord God had not caused it to rain upon the earth, and there was not a man to till, the ground. But there went up a mist from the earth, and watered the whole face of the ground.
Page 100 - She was dead. Dear, gentle, patient, noble Nell, was dead. Her little bird — a poor, slight thing the pressure of a finger would have crushed — was stirring nimbly in its cage ; and the strong heart of its child-mistress was mute and motionless for ever.
Page 100 - ... it is not on earth that Heaven's justice ends. Think what it is compared with the World to which her young spirit has winged its early flight, and say, if one deliberate wish expressed in solemn terms above this bed could call her back to life, which of us would utter it...
Page 105 - That giant, Ambition, we never can dread; Our roofs are too low for so lofty a head; Content and sweet cheerfulness open our door, They smile with the simple and feed with the poor.
Page 59 - Nath, those mighty objects of Hindoo superstition, mixing with the skies ; so far out-topping other heights that I had almost considered them illusory, I began to doubt, as I gazed on them, whether there was any interval between heaven and earth...
Page xviii - I have the honor to acknowledge the receipt of your letter on the subject of the terms held out to the Fencible Corps now raising.
Page 59 - ... in succession, as they reached them, my guides made their salaams, and returned thanks to whatever divinity they were dedicated, for having assisted them to reach such a height. Behind me, to the north-west, were the snows of Bunderpuch and Dootie, whence the Jumna flows : thence, towards the east, rose the high peaks which mark the source of the holy river, the Ganges — the Rudru Himaleh, like a white cloud, in the horizon — Kedar Nath and Badri...
Page 44 - Immerse your thermometer in water, which must be kept boiling on a brisk fire, leave it for some time, to let the mercury find its level, and then observe the highest point it has risen to. On the present occasion it rose to...
Page 25 - Abundance of wood, of the finest water, of level ground, and other requisites for building to any extent; capabilities for miles of beautiful roads for riding and driving, so much wanted in every other part of the...
Page xv - Monlbons are fet in, they can difcern an high mountainous Land to the Southward of them, and continues in Sight from December to the latter End of February, or the Beginning of 'March, and then difappears. If the Report be true, it muft be fome...