Letters on South America: Comprising Travels on the Banks of the Paraná and Rio de la Plata, Volume 2J. Murray, 1843 - Argentina Collection of letters written to General William Miller, Field Marshall of Peru. |
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Page 6
... overbearing , tyrannical , and , in particular , he had a Spaniard's dislike of foreigners and of foreign influence of every kind . Rosita very naturally preferred her younger and THE OLD LOVER , MORA . 7 more accomplished suitor.
... overbearing , tyrannical , and , in particular , he had a Spaniard's dislike of foreigners and of foreign influence of every kind . Rosita very naturally preferred her younger and THE OLD LOVER , MORA . 7 more accomplished suitor.
Page 10
... Spaniards that I did not witness a great deal of pleasantry , drollery , and wit . On this occasion these pleasant ingredients of society were rendered more piquant by the originalities of Tuckerman , Quesney , and McDougall . The wine ...
... Spaniards that I did not witness a great deal of pleasantry , drollery , and wit . On this occasion these pleasant ingredients of society were rendered more piquant by the originalities of Tuckerman , Quesney , and McDougall . The wine ...
Page 12
... Spaniards , he could scarcely , as a Scotchman , contain hist feelings of pride and joy , so far as not to interfere with the heart - stirring strains which , like another Paganini , he drew from the fiddle . But when he heard , in that ...
... Spaniards , he could scarcely , as a Scotchman , contain hist feelings of pride and joy , so far as not to interfere with the heart - stirring strains which , like another Paganini , he drew from the fiddle . But when he heard , in that ...
Page 67
... trade , was evidently augmenting ; and whereas the old Spaniards had been a year or two before the only depositaries of the wealth of the country , and of the confidence of 68 GREAT CHANGE IN BUENOS AYRES . foreigners , they 67.
... trade , was evidently augmenting ; and whereas the old Spaniards had been a year or two before the only depositaries of the wealth of the country , and of the confidence of 68 GREAT CHANGE IN BUENOS AYRES . foreigners , they 67.
Page 68
... Spaniards were fast fading into insignificance , or in a course of passive amal- gamation with the new order of things ; the most splendid and capacious habitations , which they had built at an uncountable cost , were rented by English ...
... Spaniards were fast fading into insignificance , or in a course of passive amal- gamation with the new order of things ; the most splendid and capacious habitations , which they had built at an uncountable cost , were rented by English ...
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Common terms and phrases
admired affairs Alvear Alzaga arms army army of Peru Artigas AUTHORS Ayreans Balcarce Banda Oriental Belgrano British brother Buenos Ayres bull BULL FIGHTS Cabildo called capital CAPTAIN M'DOUGALL Chile Cisneros Cochabamba Colonel comandante comandante's command Congress CONVITE Cordova Corrientes decree Desaguadero Don Baltazar Don Manuel Doña Duval Elio enemy English executive favour force Gonzalez governor Goya Goyeneche Guasú hand honour horse inhabitants Juan Junta ladies LETTER Liniers London Martin de Alzaga ment military MILLER Monte Video Mora Moreno native never night o'clock officer Oidores old Spaniards Oruro pampero Paraguay Paraná party patriots Peru Plata political port Porteños Potosi prisoners provinces Pueyrredon PUEYRREDON'S RETREAT revolution River Plate Rondeau Rosa Rosita Saavedra San José San Martin sent soldiers South American Spain Spanish spirits Supreme Director tion took town troops Tucuman vessel viceroy Vigodet whole wind Your's
Popular passages
Page 62 - Had you seen these roads before they were made, You would lift up your hands and bless General Wade.
Page 257 - ... and to all nations and men of the globe the justice that governs our votes, declare on the face of the Earth that it is the unanimous and unquestioned will of these provinces to break the forced chains that have linked them to the kings of Spain, to recover the rights of which they were despoiled, and to invest themselves with the high character of a nation free and independent from Ferdinand VII as well as from his successors and metropolis. In consequence they remain in fact and by right in...
Page 53 - Nimborum in patriam , loca feta furentibus austris , jEoliam venit. Hie vasto rex .¿Eolus antro Luctantes ventos tempestatesque sonoras Imperio premit , ac vinclis et carcere frenat.
Page 294 - A stranger would think that where beef was to be had for next to nothing, and fish for the trouble of picking it up, there could not be many beggars. He would be mistaken. In Buenos Ayres there are plenty of beggars, but then they beg in style. They almost all ride...
Page 257 - Power who presides over the universe, in the name and by the authority of the people whom we represent...
Page 256 - ... city of San Miguel del Tucuman, on the 9th of July, 1816, the ordinary sitting having terminated, the Congress of the United Provinces continued its former discussion on the great and august object of the independence of the countries which form them: constant and decided was the cry of the whole land for its solemn emancipation from the despotic power of the kings of Spain ; but the representatives, nevertheless, consecrated to so great a...
Page 264 - ... every variety of climate, productions, and people. It rises, toward the west, into a lofty and elevated soil of mountains, of which the bases terminate in immense plains, extending to the Atlantic Ocean. This region, commencing under the tropics of Capricorn, at the foot of the mountains of Jujui, is divided principally into Upper Peru and Rio de la Plata, properly so called. Peru comprehends the provinces of Potosi, Charcas or La Plata, Cochabamba, La Paz, Santa Cruz de la Sierra or Puno, Moxos,...