Journal of a Tour in the Levant, Volumen1John Murray, 1820 - 480 páginas |
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... hope that the Publick would not expect any depth of learning from one whose time was incessantly occupied by the routine of official occupation , and I adopted their suggestion with the more readiness , as I was conscious that my ...
... hope that the Publick would not expect any depth of learning from one whose time was incessantly occupied by the routine of official occupation , and I adopted their suggestion with the more readiness , as I was conscious that my ...
Página 66
... hope I have sufficiently guarded against the charge of violating any confidence reposed in me , by scrupulously avoid- ing to relate or to comment on circumstances , which were not matters of public notoriety . The government of Turkey ...
... hope I have sufficiently guarded against the charge of violating any confidence reposed in me , by scrupulously avoid- ing to relate or to comment on circumstances , which were not matters of public notoriety . The government of Turkey ...
Página 72
... hope to succeed . If he could draw them out of Constantinople , he would deprive them of their greatest source of strength , the power of destroying the city : this he has attempted , having proposed to them to march to the Danube ...
... hope to succeed . If he could draw them out of Constantinople , he would deprive them of their greatest source of strength , the power of destroying the city : this he has attempted , having proposed to them to march to the Danube ...
Página 102
... hope for the same success , though I was a little disappointed in the evening to hear , that Mr. Strani had not yet seen the Bey , and could tell me nothing till eight o'clock to - morrow morning . Tuesday , August 17th . - I went ...
... hope for the same success , though I was a little disappointed in the evening to hear , that Mr. Strani had not yet seen the Bey , and could tell me nothing till eight o'clock to - morrow morning . Tuesday , August 17th . - I went ...
Página 109
... hope of getting one with the head of Augustus , in a city built by him , in commemo- ration of a victory on which so many must have been struck . In the neighbourhood of the ruins , there are still great remains of a Roman road , four ...
... hope of getting one with the head of Augustus , in a city built by him , in commemo- ration of a victory on which so many must have been struck . In the neighbourhood of the ruins , there are still great remains of a Roman road , four ...
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Términos y frases comunes
Acropolis Albanian Ali Pasha ambassador ancient Argostoli arrived Arta Athens beautiful begged boat built buyourdi called Camellar captain castle Cephalonia church coast columns commanded Constantinople Consul contains Corfu corn delightful dinner distance dragoman dressed eight English feet five four French gardens Gastouni Greece Greek half an hour half-past high mountains hill horses immediately inhabitants Ionian islands island Janizaries khan letter Levant lodgings look Lusieri miles Morea morning Mount murder Mustapha night o'clock palace Papas Pasha passed Patrass Pausanias piastres Piræus plague plain Porte Prevesa Pyrgo rain returned rich road rock rode round ruins sailed Santa Maura sent servants ship shore side Signor stone Sultan surigee tains Tatar temple told town travellers trees Tripolizza Turkey Turkish Turks vessel vice-consul village Vizir walked walls Waywode wind Yoannina Zante
Pasajes populares
Página 81 - Turks, have no other shelter than they can find under gateways and benches in the streets, whence at intervals they send forth such repeated bowlings, that it requires practice to be able to sleep in spite of their noise. — This silence is occasionally and frequently disturbed by a fire, which is announced by the patrole striking on the pavement with their iron-shod staves, and calling loudly Yangenvar,
Página 78 - ... pace. The only sounds he hears by day, are the cries of bread, fruits, sweetmeats, or sherbet, carried in a large wooden tray on the head of an itinerant vender, and at intervals, the barking of dogs disturbed by the foot of the passenger, — lazy, ugly curs, of a...
Página 176 - ... government.", to whom, indeed, the selling of impunity or of pardon was a common source of emolument. A Zantiotc nobleman not long ago, on his deathbed, pistolled his own brother; another administered a slow poison to the only son of a rival, as the most bitter vengeance he could take on the father. The poor boy survived, but is to this day a wretched object from its effect. In short it would be equally impossible and needless to enumerate their crimes. There are only two classes, the very rich...
Página 41 - ... a little northerly of the castles) against such a current; and higher up or lower down, the strait widens so considerably, that he would save little labour by changing his place of starting. I therefore treat the tale of Leander's swimming across both ways, as one of those fables, to which the Greeks were so ready to give the name of history.
Página 82 - He must not even smoke or take snuff'. This injunction falls easy on the rich, who pass nearly all the day in bed or in idleness, and thus ward off the assaults of hunger and thirst. Yet even these look very wretched, sitting on their divan or at their doors without their favourite pipe in their mouths, and having no other occupation than turning with their fingers a chaplet of beads, which almost every inhabitant of the country, in easy circumstances, carries in his hand to amuse himself, by passing...
Página 82 - I have seen the boatmen," says Mr. Turner, "lean on their oars almost fainting ; but I never saw, never met with any one who professed to have seen, an instance in which they yielded to the temptation of violating the fast.
Página 77 - G carriages rattling through the streets, for there are* no wheeled vehicles in the city, except a very few painted carts — called arabahs — drawn by buffaloes, in which women occasionally take the air in the suburbs, and which go only a foot's pace. The only sounds he hears by day, are the cries of bread, fruits, sweetmeats, or sherbet, carried in a large wooden tray on the head of an itinerant vender, and at intervals the barking of dogs disturbed by the foot of the passenger.
Página 77 - Amid the novelties that strike the European on his arrival, nothing surprises him more than the silence that pervades so large a capital. He hears no noise of carts or...
Página 81 - The contrast between Constantinople and a European city is still more strongly marked at night. By ten o'clock every human voice is hushed...
Página 81 - ... on which the firemen assemble, and all the inhabitants in the neighborhood arc immediately on the alert. If it be not quickly subdued, all the ministers of state are obliged to attend ; and if it threaten extensive ravages, the sultan himself must appear to encourage the efforts of the firemen.