Account of a Voyage of Discovery to the West Coast of Corea and the Great Loo-Choo IslandPrinted and pub. by Abraham Small, 1818 - 201 ページ |
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18 ページ
... carried on the conference . While we were endeavouring to make ourselves understood , the other boats gradually separated , and began to form a circle round us . Apprehending treachery , we pre- pared our arms , and pushed off to a ...
... carried on the conference . While we were endeavouring to make ourselves understood , the other boats gradually separated , and began to form a circle round us . Apprehending treachery , we pre- pared our arms , and pushed off to a ...
23 ページ
... carried off the whole af . fair with so much cheerfulness and ease , as to make us suspect sometimes that he saw and enjoyed the oddity of the scene and circumstances , as fully as we did ourselves . After sitting about ten minutes , we ...
... carried off the whole af . fair with so much cheerfulness and ease , as to make us suspect sometimes that he saw and enjoyed the oddity of the scene and circumstances , as fully as we did ourselves . After sitting about ten minutes , we ...
24 ページ
... carried on with so much gravity and order , that it looked like an essential part of the etiquette . During the infliction of this punishment , a profound silence was observed by all the party , except by five or six persons immediately ...
... carried on with so much gravity and order , that it looked like an essential part of the etiquette . During the infliction of this punishment , a profound silence was observed by all the party , except by five or six persons immediately ...
43 ページ
... carried us rapidly towards a reef of rocks , which was invisible till the strong rippling of the water shewed us our danger : we let go the anchor immediately , but the jerk was so great , as to break the Lyra's cable . A second anchor ...
... carried us rapidly towards a reef of rocks , which was invisible till the strong rippling of the water shewed us our danger : we let go the anchor immediately , but the jerk was so great , as to break the Lyra's cable . A second anchor ...
44 ページ
... carried them in their arms . They looked stout , were fairer in complexion than the men , and were dressed in a long white robe , loose and open in front , with a pet- ticoat of the same colour reaching a little below the knees ; their ...
... carried them in their arms . They looked stout , were fairer in complexion than the men , and were dressed in a long white robe , loose and open in front , with a pet- ticoat of the same colour reaching a little below the knees ; their ...
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多く使われている語句
afterwards Alceste amongst amused anchor anchorage appeared attention bamboo Basil Hall beach boats brig cabin canoes Captain Max Captain Maxwell chiefs China Chinese Chro cliff Clifford cloth coast colour coral coral reefs Corean crowd curiosity deck discover distance dress dyke English examine expressed feet formed frigate gave glass hand harbour head hill island Jeema Jeeroo King kooma Loo-choo looked Lyra Mádera main land manner Maxwell's miles morning Napakiang natives Noon o'clock observed occasion Ookooma Oonting party person pipes present Prince probably rank reef Reef Island respect robe round sackee sail sailors seated seemed sent sextant shewed shewn ship shore side smoking pipes south point stone stood surprise sweet potatoes Ta-yin temple thing tion to-day took trees village walk whole wind wine wish women yards YELLOW SEA
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96 ページ - The most common worm is in the form of a star, with arms from four to six inches long, which are moved about with a rapid motion in all directions, probably to catch food. Others are so sluggish, that they may be mistaken for pieces of the rock, and are generally of a dark colour, and from four to five inches long, and two or three round.
96 ページ - ... invisible. These animals are of a great variety of shapes and sizes, and in such prodigious numbers, that, in a short time, the whole surface of the rock appears to be alive and in motion. The most common of the worms at Loo-Choo is in the form of...
97 ページ - When the coral is broken, about high-water, it is a solid, hard stone ; but if any part of it be detached at a spot which the tide reaches every day, it is found to be full of worms of different lengths and colours ; some being as fine as a thread, and several feet long, of a bright yellow, and sometimes of a blue colour ; others resemble snails, and some are not unlike lobsters in shape, but soft, and not above two inches long.
140 ページ - ... over the lower ones, giving his face a remarkable, but not a disagreeable expression. He is always cheerful, and often lively and playful, but his good sense prevents his ever going beyond the line of strict propriety. When required by etiquette to be grave, no one is so immoveably serious as Madera, and when mirth rules the hour, he is the gayest of the gay: such indeed is his taste on these occasions, that he not only catches the outward tone of his company, but really appears to think and...
178 ページ - Sunday, 27th of October. — At daybreak we unmoored, and the natives, on seeing us take up one of our anchors, thought we were going to get under weigh immediately, and give them the slip, which was not at all intended. This alarm, however, brought the chiefs off in a great hurry ; not in a body in their usual formal way, but one by one, in separate canoes. Old Jeema called on board the Lyra on his way to the frigate ; he was a good deal agitated, and the tears came into his eyes when I put a ring...
180 ページ - I found the chiefs seated in a row, all very disconsolate, and apparently trying to conceal emotions different, in all probability, from any which they had ever before experienced. Captain Maxwell had made them his parting present, and I therefore gave to each chief some trifle, receiving from them in return, their knives, pipes, pouches, and fans. In the mean time the anchor was hove up, and every thing being ready for making sail, the chiefs rose to take leave. Ookooma wished to say something,...
138 ページ - Madera has made great improvement in English, and his character is altogether more developed. He is quite at his ease in our company, and seems to take the most extraordinary, interest in every thing belonging to us ; but his ardent desire to inform himself on all subjects sometimes distresses him a good deal; he observes the facility with which we do some things, and his...
178 ページ - Before he left the Lyra he gave Mr. Clifford his pipe, tobacco pouch, and a crystal ornament ; saying, as he held out the last, " You go Ingeree, you give this to your childs.
19 ページ - ... him. He ordered an attendant to pour it into several bowls, and putting the bottle away, made signs for us to drink, but would not taste it himself till all of us had been served. He was nowise discomposed at being obliged to entertain his company at their own expense ; on the contrary, he carried off the whole affair with so much cheerfulness and ease, as to make...
94 ページ - It was interesting to observe, indeed, how early the gentle and engaging manners of all classes here won upon the sailors no lea* than upon the officers. The natives from the first were treated with entire confidence : no watch was ever kept over them, nor were they excluded from any part of the ships; and not only was nothing stolen, but when any thing was lost, nobody even suspected for an instant that it had been taken by them.