An Account of the Kingdom of Caubul, and Its Dependencies in Persia, Tartary, and India: Comprising a View of the Afghaun Nation, and a History of the Dooraunee Monarchy, Volume 1Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, and Brown, and J. Murry, 1819 |
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Page xi
... I am in- debted to Lieutenant R. M. Grindlay of the Bombay establishment , who drew them from Afghauns just arrived from their own country . POONA , JUNE 4. 1814 . NOTICE REGARDING THE MAP . I INTENDED in this place PREFACE . xi.
... I am in- debted to Lieutenant R. M. Grindlay of the Bombay establishment , who drew them from Afghauns just arrived from their own country . POONA , JUNE 4. 1814 . NOTICE REGARDING THE MAP . I INTENDED in this place PREFACE . xi.
Page 6
... water which he is often obliged to suffer in the desart . It was first seen to the west of Canound , and continued throughout the whole of the sands . previous to my arrival at his capital . The style 6 INTRODUCTION .
... water which he is often obliged to suffer in the desart . It was first seen to the west of Canound , and continued throughout the whole of the sands . previous to my arrival at his capital . The style 6 INTRODUCTION .
Page 7
... arrival at his capital . The style of his court also was very far from indicating the poverty of his government . His frontier place towards the Shekhawuttee , and conse- quently the first part of his territories which we approached ...
... arrival at his capital . The style of his court also was very far from indicating the poverty of his government . His frontier place towards the Shekhawuttee , and conse- quently the first part of his territories which we approached ...
Page 13
... arrived at our stage . The marches were seldom very long . The longest was twenty - six miles , and the short- est fifteen ; but the fatigue which our people suffered bore no proportion to the distance . Our line , when in the closest ...
... arrived at our stage . The marches were seldom very long . The longest was twenty - six miles , and the short- est fifteen ; but the fatigue which our people suffered bore no proportion to the distance . Our line , when in the closest ...
Page 27
... arrival , he sent eighty sheep , one hundred maunds of flour , and other articles of the same kind . Next day , he sent one hun- dred pots of sweetmeats , a vast number of baskets of oranges , ten bags of almonds and raisins , and five ...
... arrival , he sent eighty sheep , one hundred maunds of flour , and other articles of the same kind . Next day , he sent one hun- dred pots of sweetmeats , a vast number of baskets of oranges , ten bags of almonds and raisins , and five ...
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Common terms and phrases
Afghaun country Afghaun tribe Afghaunistaun Ahmed Akram Khaun appearance Arabs Attock Bajour banks Beloches Bikaneer branches Bulkh called camels Candahar Cashmeer Caspian sea Caubul Caubul river chief climate cloth common course court cultivated Damaun desart Dooraunee dress east Eusofzyes formed garden Ghiljies Ghuznee Girishk Gomul Hazaurehs head Helmund Heraut hills Hindoo Coosh honour horses hundred Hydaspes Hyphasis India Indus inhabitants Jeerga Khail kind King King's kingdom Kyse Ladauk lower Macartney Mahomedan manners matchlocks ment mentioned miles mission Moollahs Mooz Moultaun mountains Mussulman nation never Oolooss ornamented Oxus Paropamisan party passed Persian person Peshawer Pisheen plain Punjaub Pushtoo rain Raja range of Solimaun remarkable round runs Salt Range scarcely Shauh shawl shew Siks snow sometimes Speen stream table land tains Taugh Taujiks tent Tibet tion Toorkistaun town trees Uzbek valley village whole wild
Popular passages
Page 8 - Who hath sent out the wild ass free? or who hath loosed the bands of the wild ass ? 6 Whose house I have made the wilderness, and the barren land his dwellings. 7 He scorneth the multitude of the city, neither regardeth he the crying of the driver. 8 The range of the mountains is his pasture, and he searcheth after every green thing.
Page 330 - PRAISE be to God, the Lord of all creatures, the most merciful, the king of the day of judgment. Thee do we worship, and of thee do we beg assistance. Direct us in the right way, in the way of those to whom thou hast been gracious ; not of those against whom thou art incensed, nor of those who go astray...
Page 197 - Its approach is announced by vast masses of clouds that rise from the Indian Ocean, and advance towards the north-east, gathering and thickening as they approach the land. After some threatening days, the sky assumes a troubled appearance in the evenings, and the monsoon in general sets in during the night.
Page 234 - ... undirected and unrestrained. Amidst the stormy independence of this mode of life, he would regret the ease and security in which the state of India, and even the indolence and timidity of its inhabitants, enable most parts of that country to repose. He would meet with many productions of art and...
Page 199 - ... and discoloured, and sweep down along with them the hedges, the huts, and the remains of the cultivation which was carried on, during the dry season, in their beds.
Page 203 - Coromandel coast, covered by the mountainous countries on its west, is entirely exempt from it. Further north, the monsoon begins early in June, and loses a good deal of its violence, except in the places influenced by the neighbourhood of the mountains or the sea, where the fall of water is very considerable. About Delhi, it does not begin...
Page 394 - Afghauns in a few words ; their vices are revenge, envy, avarice, rapacity, and obstinacy ; on the other hand, they are fond of liberty, faithful to their friends, kind to their dependents, hospitable, brave, hardy, frugal, laborious, and prudent ; and they are less disposed than the nations in their neighbourhood to falsehood, intrigue, and deceit.
Page 234 - ... large sheepskin cloaks. He would admire their strong and active forms, their fair complexions and European features ; their industry, and enterprise ; the hospitality, sobriety, and contempt of pleasure, which appear in all their habits ; and, above all, the independence and energy of their character. In India, he would have left a country where every movement originates in the government or its agents, and where the people absolutely go for nothing ; and, he would find himself among a nation...
Page 76 - ... an ornament of the same kind on each thigh, large emerald bracelets on the arms (above the elbow), and many other jewels in different places. In one of the bracelets was the Cohi Noor, known to be one of the largest diamonds in the world.* There were also some strings of very large pearls, put on like cross belts, but loose.
Page 85 - ... on a brazen cup, in which they give a draught to a passenger for a trifling piece of money. With these were mixed, people of the town in white turbans, some in large white or dark blue frocks, and others in sheep-skin cloaks ; Persians, and Afghauns, in brown woollen tunics, or flowing mantles, and caps of black sheep-skin or coloured silk ; Khyberees, with the straw sandals, and the wild dress, and air of their...