Personal Narrative of Travels to the Equinoctial Regions of the New Continent During the Years 1799-1804, Volume 7Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, and Brown, 1829 - Natural history |
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
according America annual Antilles archipelago arrobas augmented Batabano beetroot blacks Carthagena Cayman Cayo cent coast coffee colonies colour commerce Consulado consumption crocodiles Cruz cultivation Cumana custom-house Darien east eastern English islands equator estimated Europe expence exportation France furnish Guanabacoa Guanajay Guines Guyana Havannah Hayti hectare Herera importation Indians inhabitants island of Cuba isle of Pinos Jamaica Jaruco Juan kilog la Vibora land latitude limestone longitude Matanzas mean temperature meridian Mexico millions of kilograms millions of piasters mulattoes negroes observations Ocean Oroonoko palm-trees Pardos Paris piasters plantations population port pounds produce Puerto Principe Punta Rio Sinu rocks Saint Domingo Santiago Santiago de Cuba slaves soil Spain Spanish square marine leagues sugar sugar-cane surface thermometer tion toises town Trinidad tropics Uraba vannah Vibora Villa Villa Clara West Indies whites wind Xagua zone
Popular passages
Page 212 - Hayti, was introduced towards the end of the sixteenth and the beginning of the seventeenth century. It was generally hoped that the cultivation of tobacco, freed from all the shackles of an odious monopoly, would furnish the Havannah with a very considerable object of commerce.
Page 63 - E.), and does not exceed that of Cairo and Lower Egypt. The difference between the mean temperature of the hottest and coldest months, rises to 12° in the interior of the island ; at the Havannah, and on the coast, to 8° ; at Cumana, to scarcely 3°. The hottest months, July and August, attain 28'8°, at the island of Cuba, perhaps 29'5° of mean temperature, as at the equator.
Page 479 - A woman, annoyed by the jealousy and well founded reproaches of her husband, conceived a project of the most barbarous vengeance. With the assistance of her lover she bound her husband with cords, and threw him, at night, into a bush of Mimosa cornigera. The more violently he struggled, the more the sharp woody thorns of the tree tore his skin. His cries were heard by persons who were passing, and he was found after several hours of suffering, covered with blood, and dreadfully stung by the ants.
Page 44 - They are, according to the most accurate calculations, in lat. 22° 58' 19" N., and long. 84° 40' 19" W. The decreasing level of the limestone formations of the island of Cuba towards the north and west, indicates the submarine connection of those rocks with the lands equally low of the Bahama Islands, of Florida and Yucatan. The central and western parts of the island contain two formations of compact lime96 ttont, one of clayey sandstone, and another of gypsum.