Voyages and Travels in the Levant in the Years 1749, 50, 51, 52: Containing Observations in Natural History, Physick, Agriculture, and Commerce: Particularly on the Holy Land, and the Natural History of the Scriptures |
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Page 2
... built with fmall wooden - houses , which gave the place the appearance of a little town . Thofe on one fide are called Iutholmen and the other Dalereon . The inhabitants of both places are chiefly pilots and fishermen . They catch here ...
... built with fmall wooden - houses , which gave the place the appearance of a little town . Thofe on one fide are called Iutholmen and the other Dalereon . The inhabitants of both places are chiefly pilots and fishermen . They catch here ...
Page 6
... built on a rifing ground , close by the harbour ; it is furnished with many faws , which are worked by the wind ; and is fo contrived , as to raife the timber out of the fea . We came out of the large harbour , through a flood - gate ...
... built on a rifing ground , close by the harbour ; it is furnished with many faws , which are worked by the wind ; and is fo contrived , as to raife the timber out of the fea . We came out of the large harbour , through a flood - gate ...
Page 8
... their bodies , fo as likewife to cover their faces . It is ufed by all people of middling fortunes , and hath without doubt been introduced by the foreigners , that that first built the town , nor has it yet 8 TRAVELS TO THE EAST .
... their bodies , fo as likewife to cover their faces . It is ufed by all people of middling fortunes , and hath without doubt been introduced by the foreigners , that that first built the town , nor has it yet 8 TRAVELS TO THE EAST .
Page 9
... built the town , nor has it yet undergone the change , to which the drefs of women is liable . THE 7th inftant , I went to a peafant's house in the country , where the window was in the roof , which made the rooms dark , but much warmer ...
... built the town , nor has it yet undergone the change , to which the drefs of women is liable . THE 7th inftant , I went to a peafant's house in the country , where the window was in the roof , which made the rooms dark , but much warmer ...
Page 15
... built with a rough fand - stone , with which was mixt with fome coarse light yellow clay in large pieces ; this was in fome places turned quite red by the heat of the fun . AFTER Walking near a mile from the shore , we came into the ...
... built with a rough fand - stone , with which was mixt with fome coarse light yellow clay in large pieces ; this was in fome places turned quite red by the heat of the fun . AFTER Walking near a mile from the shore , we came into the ...
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Voyages and Travels in the Levant in the Years 1749, 50, 51, 52: Containing ... Fredrik Hasselquist No preview available - 2017 |
Voyages and Travels in the Levant in the Years 1749, 50, 51, 52: Containing ... Fredrik Hasselquist No preview available - 2018 |
Common terms and phrases
Aleppo Alexandria alfo almoſt amongſt Arabs Balfam befides beſt bird bloffom Cairo camels Chrift Chriftians church coaft colour common confiderable confifts Cyprus Damiata defarts defcribed defcription diſeaſe Dotterell Eaft Egypt Egyptians eſpecially faid fame fcarcely feemed feen fent ferved feven feveral fhall fhew fhore fhould fide filk firſt fiſh fituated fize flowers fmall foliis fome fometimes foon fpecies French ftones fuch Galilee Gall Fly gardens greateſt Greeks grows Gum Arabic hath hiftory himſelf holy horfes houfe houſes inhabitants iſland Jaculus Jaffa Jerufalem journey Judea laft lefs Levant likewife Locufts Mecca Monks moſt mountain muſt myſelf Natolia Nile obfervations occafion paffed perfon phyfician plant pleaſe pleaſure prefent prieſts quantity reafon ſcarcely ſeen ſmall Smyrna ſome Spaniſh Sweden Swediſh Syft Syria thefe themſelves theſe thing thofe thoſe town travelled tree Turkish Turks Upper Egypt uſed veffels
Popular passages
Page 283 - What could have been done more to my vineyard, That I have not done in it? Wherefore, when I looked that it should bring forth grapes, Brought it forth wild grapes?
Page 61 - THEY take the moft poifonous vipers with their bare hands, play with them, put them in their bofoms, and ufe a great many more tricks with them, as I have often feen. The perfon I faw on the above day, had only a fmall viper ; but I have frequently feen them handle thofe that were three or four feet long, and of the moft horrid fort.
Page 61 - Beings. I do not know whether their power is to be afcribed to good or evil; but I am perfuaded that thofe who undertake it ufe many fuperftitions.
Page 188 - Falcon, which flew in a direft line, like an arrow, and attacked the animal, fixing the talons of one of his feet into the cheek of the creature, and the talons of the other into its throat, extending his wings obliquely over the animal ; fpreading one towards one of its ears, and the other to the oppofite hip.
Page 127 - Turpentine-tree ; but farther towards Jericho, they are bare and barren. The vales, like the hills, are not fruitful, but deferted and uncultivated, being full of pebbles, and without vegetables ; neverthelefs, the earth confifts of a good red mould, and would amply reward the hufbandman's toil.
Page 63 - Viperae officinales, which were not fond of their lodging. They found means to creep out before the bottle could be corked. They crept over the hands and bare arms of the woman, without occasioning the...
Page 65 - ... serpents depends upon this circumstance. We see by this, that they know how to make use of the same means used by other nations ; namely, to hide under the superstitious cloak of religion what may be easily and naturally explained, especially when they cannot or will not explain the natural reason. I am inclined to think that all which was formerly, and is yet, reckoned witchcraft, might come under the same article with the fascination of serpents. The discovery of a small matter may in time...
Page 6 - Wine ferments, it ads on thefe fine particles, and the motion thereby occafioned is fufficient to mix them with the Wine, which by thefe means, contains all the virtues of the grape and flower. I know that the Greek...
Page 160 - OS] hanging ripe on the stem, which lay withered on the ground. From the season in which this mandrake blossoms and ripens fruit, one might form a conjecture that it was Rachel's dudaim. These were brought her in the wheat harvest, which in Galilee is in the month of May, about this time, and the mandrake was now in fruit.