Transactions of the Literary Society of Bombay, Volume 1Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, and Brown, 1819 - Asia |
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Page vii
... India Company's resident at Bu- shire , regarding a disease known among the wandering tribes of Persia , contracted by such as milk the cattle and sheep , and said to be a preven- tive of the small - pox ; -in order to give as much ...
... India Company's resident at Bu- shire , regarding a disease known among the wandering tribes of Persia , contracted by such as milk the cattle and sheep , and said to be a preven- tive of the small - pox ; -in order to give as much ...
Page x
... Indian Languages . By Sir JAMES MACKINTOSH , President of the Society APPENDIX A. QUERIES ; to which the Answers will be Contributions towards a statistical Account of Bombay - 259 289 · 296 297 * · 305 B. Letter of the President of the ...
... Indian Languages . By Sir JAMES MACKINTOSH , President of the Society APPENDIX A. QUERIES ; to which the Answers will be Contributions towards a statistical Account of Bombay - 259 289 · 296 297 * · 305 B. Letter of the President of the ...
Page xi
... India fell into the hands of one of the most intelligent and inquisitive nations of the world , it was natural to expect that its ancient and present state should at last be fully disclosed . These expectations were indeed for a time ...
... India fell into the hands of one of the most intelligent and inquisitive nations of the world , it was natural to expect that its ancient and present state should at last be fully disclosed . These expectations were indeed for a time ...
Page xii
... India our national character , cooperating with local circum- stances , should have produced some real and perhaps more apparent in- activity in working the mine of knowledge of which we had become the masters . Yet some of the earliest ...
... India our national character , cooperating with local circum- stances , should have produced some real and perhaps more apparent in- activity in working the mine of knowledge of which we had become the masters . Yet some of the earliest ...
Page xv
... India the desires and wants of the learned at home , and of stating the subjects on which they wish and expect satisfaction , from inquiries which can be pursued only in India . In fulfilling the duties of this mission , I shall not be ...
... India the desires and wants of the learned at home , and of stating the subjects on which they wish and expect satisfaction , from inquiries which can be pursued only in India . In fulfilling the duties of this mission , I shall not be ...
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Common terms and phrases
ancient appears Archæologia arms army Barsisa Bhungy body Bombay Bouddhists Brahminical Bramha broken Bunjaras Burteeah caliphs called Captain cave Charon chief chieftains circumstance compartment death Deccan Deity district divine earth eastern elephant Elephanta entrance Euphrates excavation feet female figure four give Gowricha grain gulf of Kutch Guzerat hand head height Herodotus Hillah Hindoos Hindû holy honour human hundred Husneah inches India inhabitants Kattee Kattiwar Khan knowledge Kutch language lîng Mahomedan Marwar miles Muchoo Mussulman mythology Naig natives nature neighbourhood never Niebuhr object observed ornaments Parvati peisach peninsula Persian person pillars possess present principal probably Prophet province racter Rahtores raja Rajpoot religion remarkable represented river round rupees Sanscrit Scindian sculpture sect seems Shiva Shrawuk side Society soul stone Sûfis supposed tauda temple thing thou tion tribe vahana village Vishnû whole words worship
Popular passages
Page xiv - Whatever withdraws us from the power of our senses, whatever makes the past, the distant, or the future predominate over the present, advances us in the dignity of thinking beings.
Page 122 - And Babylon, the glory of kingdoms, the beauty of the Chaldees' excellency, Shall be as when God overthrew Sodom and Gomorrah. It shall never be inhabited, Neither shall it be dwelt in from generation to generation : Neither shall the Arabian pitch tent there ; Neither shall the shepherds make their fold there.
Page 106 - Even thus shall it be in the day when the Son of man is revealed. 31 In that day, he which shall be upon the house-top, and his stuff in the house, let him not come down to take it away : and he that is in the field, let him likewise not return back. 32 Remember Lot's wife. 33 Whosoever shall seek to save his life, shall lose it; and whosoever shall lose his life. shall preserve it.
Page 199 - ... teach in public a religion, in which, in supposed compliance with the infirmities and passions of human nature, the deity is brought more to a level with our prejudices and wants. The incomprehensible attributes ascribed to him are invested with sensible and even human forms.
Page 2 - Majesty's head, and had certainly despatched him if a large brass lamp which was burning over his head had not marred the blow; but, before he could make another, he was killed by the guards; and, I believe, the same Samorin reigns yet. I chanced to come that time along the coast and heard the guns for two or three days and nights successively.
Page xiii - L .... of a general direction of the mind of Englishmen in this country towards learned inquiries, was the foundation of the Asiatic Society by Sir William Jones. To give such an impulse to the public understanding is one of the greatest benefits that a man can confer on his fellow men. On such an occasion as the present, it is impossible to pronounce the name of Sir William Jones without feelings of gratitude and reverence. He was among the distinguished persons who adorned one of the brightest...
Page xiv - In his easy and flowing prose we justly admire that order of exposition and transparency of language, which are the most indispensable qualities of style, and the chief excellencies of which it is capable, when it is employed solely to instruct. His writings everywhere breathe pure taste in morals as well as in literature ; and it may be said with truth that not a single sentiment has escaped him which does not indicate the real elegance and dignity which pervaded the most secret recesses of his...
Page xvi - ... contributed towards the accomplishment of the ambitious projects of those philosophers, who from the arrangement of earths and minerals have been bold enough to form conjectures respecting the general laws which have governed the past revolutions of our planet, and which preserve its parts in their present order. The Botany of India has been less neglected, but it cannot be exhausted. The higher parts of the science, the structure, the functions, the habits of vegetables, — all subjects intimately...
Page 301 - Ahmedabad is computed at a hundred thousand souls, a number nearly equal to one half of its population. The demand for wood to burn the Hindoos, called for the destruction of the houses ; even this was barely sufficient for the performance of the rites required by the Hindoo faith ; and the half-consumed bodies on the banks of the Saburmuttee evince at this hour to what straits the Hindoos were reduced in fulfilling the last duties to their kindred.
Page xxiii - ... tendency to produce tumult or convulsion. On the contrary, nothing more clearly evinces the necessity of that firm protecting power by which alone order can be secured. The security of the governed cannot exist without the security of the governors. Lastly, of all kinds of knowledge, political economy has the greatest tendency to promote quiet and safe improvement in the general condition of mankind...