The Middle Kingdom: A Survey of the ... Chinese Empire and Its Inhabitants ...Wiley & Putnam, 1848 |
Kirjan sisältä
Tulokset 1 - 5 kokonaismäärästä 100
Sivu vii
... respecting legalizing opium - Reasons against it - Discussion respecting the trade among foreigners - Riot at Canton - Lin arrives at Canton - Opium surrendered . 468 CHAPTER XXIII . PROGRESS OF THE WAR AND OPENING OF.
... respecting legalizing opium - Reasons against it - Discussion respecting the trade among foreigners - Riot at Canton - Lin arrives at Canton - Opium surrendered . 468 CHAPTER XXIII . PROGRESS OF THE WAR AND OPENING OF.
Sivu 49
... respect to aquatic productions ; here nothing comes amiss ; all waters are vexed with their fisheries . Their nets and various contrivances for capturing fish display great ingenuity , and most of them are admirably adapted to the ...
... respect to aquatic productions ; here nothing comes amiss ; all waters are vexed with their fisheries . Their nets and various contrivances for capturing fish display great ingenuity , and most of them are admirably adapted to the ...
Sivu 54
... respect , support , freedom from servile labor , and edu- cation , she receives , but also in the reflex influences she exerts of a purifying , harmonizing , and elevating character . Where the requirements of the gospel are ...
... respect , support , freedom from servile labor , and edu- cation , she receives , but also in the reflex influences she exerts of a purifying , harmonizing , and elevating character . Where the requirements of the gospel are ...
Sivu 58
... respects to the bride , while her husband calls the attention of his visitors to her charms , praises her little feet , her beautiful hands , and other features , and then accompanies them into the hall , where they are regaled with ...
... respects to the bride , while her husband calls the attention of his visitors to her charms , praises her little feet , her beautiful hands , and other features , and then accompanies them into the hall , where they are regaled with ...
Sivu 68
... respect called kung shau , which is merely joining the hands and raising them before the breast . The next is tso yih , bowing low with the hands thus joined . The third is ta tsien , bending the knee as if about to kneel ; and kwei ...
... respect called kung shau , which is merely joining the hands and raising them before the breast . The next is tso yih , bowing low with the hands thus joined . The third is ta tsien , bending the knee as if about to kneel ; and kwei ...
Muita painoksia - Näytä kaikki
Yleiset termit ja lausekkeet
ambassy Amoy arrived authorities Batavia better boats British brought Budhist called Canton Captain Elliot carried ceremonies character chiefly China Chinese government Chinese Repository Chinkiang Christian coast Cochinchina color commenced common conduct Confucius countrymen court death dynasty emperor emperor of China empire endeavored England English exhibited exportation favor feet fire force foreigners Fuhkien governor heaven hong-merchants Hongkong imperial India intercourse Jesuits Kíying Koxinga labors land laws learned Lord Lord Napier Macao Malacca Manchus ment merchants mission missionaries mode monarch Mongols Morrison nations native Ningpo officers opium trade party Peking persons ports Portuguese present priests provinces received regard reign religion returned river rulers sent Shanghai ships silk Singapore society soon streets subjects supposed taken Tang dynasty taste temples tion treaty treaty of Nanking troops vessels Whampoa whole worship
Suositut otteet
Sivu 224 - Defile not ye yourselves in any of these things: for in all these the nations are defiled which I cast out before you...
Sivu 245 - But when ye pray, use not vain repetitions, as the heathen do : for they think that they shall be heard for their much speaking.
Sivu 539 - Maine, New Hampshire, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Connecticut, Vermont, New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Delaware, Maryland, Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, Kentucky, Tennessee, Ohio, Louisiana...
Sivu 539 - Our minister, Caleb Cushing, is authorized to make a treaty to regulate trade. Let it be just. Let there be no unfair advantage on either side.
Sivu 85 - Hardly prepared for this blow to my established notions, I requested he would discourse of their philosophy. He reopened the volume, and read with becoming gravity, ' The most learned men are decidedly of opinion that the seat of the human understanding is the stomach.'* I seized the volume in despair, and rushed from the apartment.
Sivu 540 - Pekin, and there deliver it ; and that your great officers will, by your order, make a treaty with him to regulate affairs of trade, so that nothing may happen to disturb the peace between China and America. Let the treaty be signed by your own imperial hand. It shall be signed by mine, by the authority of our great council, the Senate. And so may your health be good, and may peace reign.
Sivu 88 - With a general regard for outward decency, they are vile and polluted in a shocking degree, their conversation is full of filthy expressions, and their lives of impure acts.
Sivu 445 - The barbarians are like beasts, and not to be ruled on the same principles as citizens. Were any one to attempt controlling them by the great maxims of reason, it would tend to nothing but confusion. The ancient kings well understood this, and accordingly ruled barbarians by misrule. Therefore, to rule barbarians by misrule is the true and the best way of ruling them.
Sivu 540 - Fu-chow, and all such other places as may offer profitable exchanges both to China and the United States, provided they do not break your laws nor our laws. We shall not take the part of evil-doers. We shall not uphold them that break your laws. Therefore, we doubt not that you will be pleased...
Sivu 507 - Emperor he described how he had braved the hottest of the fight " on the battle-field, where cannon balls innumerable, flying in awful confusion through the expanse of Heaven, fell before, behind, and on either side of him, while in the distance he saw the ships of the rebels, standing erect, lofty as the mountains. The fierce daring of the rebels was inconceivable. Officers and men fell at their posts. Every effort to resist and check the...