Visits to High Tartary, Yârkand, and Kâshghar (formerly Chinese Tartary), and Return Journey Over the Karakoram PassJ. Murray, 1871 - 486 pages |
Autres éditions - Tout afficher
Visits to High Tartary, Yârkand, and Kâshghar (formerly Chinese Tartary ... Robert Shaw Affichage du livre entier - 1871 |
Visits to High Tartary, Yarkand and Kashgar (formerly Chinese Tartary), and ... Robert Shaw Affichage du livre entier - 1871 |
Visits to High Tartary, Yârkand, and Kâshgar (formerly Chinese Tartary): And ... Robert Shaw Affichage du livre entier - 1871 |
Expressions et termes fréquents
afterwards Akhoond Andijân Argoon arrived Aryan asked Atalik-Ghâzee bashee bazâr Bokhâra brought called camp caravan Cashmeer Central Asia CHAP chief Chinese Choomâroo Dâd-khwâh dastar-khân Diwân Bakhsh Eastern Toorkistân English Englishman envoy feet fire Governor Guddee guns Hajjee hand Hayward heard Hindoo honour horses India Jemadar Jooma journey Kangra Kara-Kalpak Karakash Karakash River Kâshghar Khan Khoja Khokand Khoten King King's Kipchaks Kirghiz Ladâk laughed letter Mahammad Yakoob Mahram Mahrambashee Marco Polo merchants Mihmandâr miles Moghul Moonshee Moonshee's morning mountains Mussulman officers Oozbeks Pamir Pangong Lake Panjâbashee pass Persian plain ponies prayers present reached replied river road robe round Russians Sanjoo Sarda Sarikol says Schlagintweit sent servants Shaghâwal Shahidoolla side Sirkar sitting snow soldiers stream Tajiks talk Tartar Tashee Tibet Tibetan to-day told Toongânees Toorkee town tribes valley village wall yaks Yang-hissâr Yâr yards Yârkand Yooz Yoozbashee
Fréquemment cités
Page 491 - THE HOLY BIBLE, according to the AUTHORIZED VERSION, AD 1611. With an EXPLANATORY and CRITICAL COMMENTARY and a REVISION of the TRANSLATION. By BISHOPS and other CLERGY of the ANGLICAN CHURCH.
Page 491 - MUSTERS' (CAPT.) Patagonians; a Year's Wanderings over Untrodden Ground from the Straits of Magellan to the Rio Negro.
Page 169 - It is said also that some persons, in their course across the desert, have seen what appeared to them to be a body of armed men advancing towards them, And apprehensive of being attacked and plundered have taken to flight. Losing by this means the right path, and ignorant of the direction they should take to regain it, they have perished miserably of hunger.
Page 483 - Khan. Part of the force was at that moment in hot pursuit, or the ruin would have been wider. The rest ran, some to large trees which were all soon uprooted and borne away, others to rocks which were speedily buried beneath the waters. Only they escaped who took at .once to the mountain side. About five hundred of these troops were at once swept to destruction.
Page 74 - I will not here inflict on the reader a history of the troubles I underwent in arranging for a start. Ladak is infested with a set of ruffians called Argoons,1 half-bred between Toorkistan fathers and Ladak mothers. Like most half-castes, they possess all the evil qualities of both races without any of their virtues.
Page 8 - ... howling waste of mountains, such as one might imagine the Atlas to be, or such as Aden is; and this under an Italian sky, with an atmosphere which acts like a telescope, bringing the most minute and distant objects into notice. No gradations of verdure ; each bit of cultivation is as distinctly defined from the surrounding desert hill-side as if it had been actually cut out by measurement from another country and dropped there. Approaching the village, you pass a long, low, broad wall, covered...
Page 3 - Black tents of peculiar make appear for a few days at a time in the winter on open spaces by the roadsides, and shelter dingy families of narrow-eyed Tibetans — petty traders, who come down with their wares. They are not prepossessing in appearance, with their high cheek-bones, their dirt, and their long pig-tails. But they are the most good-tempered of mortals, and they always greet you with a grin. Moreover, every year the few English sportsmen who penetrate into the wilder parts of Ladak bring...