Fruits of enterprize exhibited in the travels of Belzoni in Egypt and Nubia, by the author of The India cabinet1824 |
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Стр. ix
... Pompey's Pillar , by means of a paper kite . - Removal of the Obelisk from the island of Philoe . - It falls into the Nile . - Ingenious method of raising it . It is launched down the Cataract . - Arrives in safety at Rosetta ...
... Pompey's Pillar , by means of a paper kite . - Removal of the Obelisk from the island of Philoe . - It falls into the Nile . - Ingenious method of raising it . It is launched down the Cataract . - Arrives in safety at Rosetta ...
Стр. xii
... Pompey's Pillar 19. Belzoni's Distress in observing a part of the Obelisk 199 .. in the Water 204 20. The Boat with the Obelisk descending the Cataract 21. Scene near the Lake Moris 208 217 22. A furious Hyena makes his Appearance , to ...
... Pompey's Pillar 19. Belzoni's Distress in observing a part of the Obelisk 199 .. in the Water 204 20. The Boat with the Obelisk descending the Cataract 21. Scene near the Lake Moris 208 217 22. A furious Hyena makes his Appearance , to ...
Стр. 196
... Pompey was killed as he was going to that country , you know , soon after he had stepped into the little bark . I ... Pompey's pillar is one hundred and ten feet high ; the monument in London is two hundred and two feet from the ...
... Pompey was killed as he was going to that country , you know , soon after he had stepped into the little bark . I ... Pompey's pillar is one hundred and ten feet high ; the monument in London is two hundred and two feet from the ...
Стр. 197
... Pompey was killed in 706 . time of the erection of the pillar is scarcely known , but it was named after him in the fifteenth century , when learning began to revive from a torpid state , in which it had long languished , and men of ...
... Pompey was killed in 706 . time of the erection of the pillar is scarcely known , but it was named after him in the fifteenth century , when learning began to revive from a torpid state , in which it had long languished , and men of ...
Стр. 198
... Pompey's pillar ; however , he polite- ly left them to themselves , saying that the Eng- lish were too great patriots to injure the remains of Pompey . The kite was brought , and the wind being in the right direction , it flew so ...
... Pompey's pillar ; however , he polite- ly left them to themselves , saying that the Eng- lish were too great patriots to injure the remains of Pompey . The kite was brought , and the wind being in the right direction , it flew so ...
Часто встречающиеся слова и выражения
A.-Belzoni A.-They A.-When Ababde amused ancient aperture appeared Arabs arrived Assouan Bashaw beautiful Beban el Malook Bedouins Belzoni Berenice BERNARD BERNARD.-I BERNARD.-What boat Boolac bust Cacheff Cairo Caliud camels Carnac Cataract colossal Copts dare say dear mamma delightful desert door Egypt Egyptians embarked EMILY EMILY.-I entered enterprizing entrance Esne feet formed Gournou gratified ground Hamed Aga hieroglyphics hope Khalil Bey land Laura Luxor machine Mahomed mamma Memnon morning mother mountains mummy cave night Nile Nubia obelisk OWEN OWEN.-I palm-leaf ropes palm-trees papa passage piastres pillars Pompeii Pompey's pillar proceeded procure pyramid reached rocks ruins sand sarcophagus Scheik seated second Cataract side Soubra spot stones suppose tell temple Thebes thing thought told tomb traveller Turks valley of Beban village Wady Halfa whilst wished Ybsambul young Memnon zoni Zubara
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Стр. 179 - The cloud-capt towers, the gorgeous palaces, The solemn temples, the great globe itself, Yea, all which it inherits, shall dissolve ; And, like the baseless fabric of a vision, Leave not a wreck behind ! we are such stuff As dreams are made on, and our little life Is rounded with a sleep.
Стр. 93 - Every part of these rocks is cut out by art, in the form of large and small chambers, each of which has its separate entrance ; and, though they are very close to each other, it is seldom that there is any interior communication from one to another.
Стр. 29 - ... city on this side. The unrivalled colossal figures in the plains of Thebes, the number of tombs excavated in the rocks, those in the great valley of the kings, with their paintings, sculptures, mummies, sarcophagi, figures, &c. are all objects worthy of the admiration of the traveller ; who will not fail to wonder how a nation, which was once so great as to erect these stupendous edifices, could so far fall into oblivion, that even their language and writing are totally unknown to us.
Стр. 97 - ... me with horror. The blackness of the wall, the faint light given by the candles or torches for want of air, the different objects that surrounded me, seeming to converse with each other, and the Arabs with the candles or torches in their hands, naked and covered with dust, themselves resembling living mummies, absolutely formed a scene that cannot be described.
Стр. 106 - I THANK the goodness and the grace Which on my birth have smiled, And made me, in these Christian days, A happy English child.
Стр. 102 - Besides enamelling, the art of gilding was m high perfection among the Egyptians, as Belzoni found several ornaments of that kind. They knew how to cast copper, as well as how to form it into sheets; and had a metallic composition not unlike our lead, but rather softer. OWEN. — Very much like the lead we see on paper, in the tea-chests from China, I suppose, mamma ? Emily once had some of it, with the Chinese pictures, from which she wished to copy the figures for the screens. MRS. A. — Yes,...
Стр. 76 - I put a sack filled with sand, that, if the colossus should run too fast into the boat, it might be stopped. In the ground behind the colossus I had a piece of a palm-tree firmly planted, round which a rope was twisted, and then fastened to its car, to let it descend gradually.
Стр. 197 - The pedestal has been somewhat damaged by the instruments of travellers, who are anxious to possess a relic of this antiquity ; and one of the volutes of the column was immaturely brought down a few years ago by the ingenuity of some English captains.
Стр. 190 - It is difficult to form a correct idea of a desert, without having been in one : it is an endless plain of sand and stones, sometimes intermixed with mountains of all sizes and heights, without roads or shelter, without any sort of produce for food. The few scattered trees and shrubs of thorns, that only appear when the rainy season leaves some moisture, barely serve to feed wild animals, and a few birds.