Journal, Volume 21833 |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 73
Page 18
... earth , showed us the way to the spot , which lay amidst marshes , and I could not help thinking that these very marshes had caused the melancholy event . We were surprised to hear that the severities of fortune , which accompanied ...
... earth , showed us the way to the spot , which lay amidst marshes , and I could not help thinking that these very marshes had caused the melancholy event . We were surprised to hear that the severities of fortune , which accompanied ...
Page 23
... earth from the factories , which of course contains more saline matter than the general soil . In the month of November , the loneahs or native manufacturers of saltpetre commence their operations , by scraping the surface off from old ...
... earth from the factories , which of course contains more saline matter than the general soil . In the month of November , the loneahs or native manufacturers of saltpetre commence their operations , by scraping the surface off from old ...
Page 24
... earth to the depth of four or five inches , according to the size of the filter and quantity of earth used , ( one of six feet diameter will filter 20 maunds of earth . ) The whole is then suffered to remain tranquil for several hours ...
... earth to the depth of four or five inches , according to the size of the filter and quantity of earth used , ( one of six feet diameter will filter 20 maunds of earth . ) The whole is then suffered to remain tranquil for several hours ...
Page 25
... earth . At the end of about 30 hours , the process of crystallization is finished . The crystals of saltpetre are taken out of the coolers , and put into baskets to drain , after which they are removed to the store - house , ready for ...
... earth . At the end of about 30 hours , the process of crystallization is finished . The crystals of saltpetre are taken out of the coolers , and put into baskets to drain , after which they are removed to the store - house , ready for ...
Page 26
... earth on which the utensils are placed , occasionally they are broken , and the contents of course falls into the earth below . This earth is . again subjected to the process of filtration , and the practice of the manufacturer , in ...
... earth on which the utensils are placed , occasionally they are broken , and the contents of course falls into the earth below . This earth is . again subjected to the process of filtration , and the practice of the manufacturer , in ...
Contents
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Common terms and phrases
Adi-Buddha angle appear Asiatic Society astronomer B. H. Hodgson Bactrian Balkh barometer bazar Bharatpur boiling Bokhára Bombay Brahmans brown Calcutta canal Capt character clay clear clouds coarse coins colour copper cubits in girth cumuli Delhi diam diameter dishes ditto Doab earth equal feet in girth fibre formed furniture.-Ham glaze grain granite Gualpara heat height hills Himalaya Hindú Kúsh inch India instrument James Prinsep Jamna Kábul Khás Khulm king Körös large tree Laurus layers less letter Lieut lustre Martaban means miles month Morád morning mountains Muhammedan natives nearly Nipal observations obverse Oxus pass Persian plates present Prinsep quantity rain Raja rays river rock rupees saltpetre sand season shew silver soft specimens star strychnia surface Symplocos Tavoy temperature tetradrachma thermometer Tibetan tikals timber tion tubes village wind wood
Popular passages
Page 285 - And when the king came in to see the guests, he saw there a man which had not on a wedding garment: and he saith unto him, Friend, how earnest thou in hither not having a wedding garment? And he was speechless. Then said the king to the servants. Bind him hand and foot, and take him away, and cast him into outer darkness; there shall be weeping and gnashing of teeth.
Page 457 - It seems possible, to account for all the phenomena of heat, if it be supposed, that in solids the particles are in a constant state of vibratory motion , the particles of the hottest bodies moving with the greatest velocity, and through the greatest space ; that in fluids and elastic fluids, besides the vibratory motion, which must be conceived greatest in the last, the particles have a motion round their own axes, with different velocities, the particles of elastic fluids moving with the greatest...
Page 560 - It occupies a front of 70 feet; and the niche in which it is excavated, extends about that depth into the hill. This idol is mutilated ; both legs having been fractured by cannon ; and the countenance above the mouth is destroyed. The lips are very large ; the ears long and pendent ; and there appears to have been a tiara on the head. The figure is covered by a mantle, which hangs over it in all parts, and has been formed of a kind of plaster ; the image having been studded with wooden pins in various...
Page 216 - Kshatriyas, wear the thread, and assume the patronymic title. The original .Khas, thus favoured by it, became soon and entirely devoted to the Brahmanical system.* The progress of Islam below daily poured fresh refugees among them. They availed themselves of the superior knowledge of the strangers to subdue the neighbouring tribes of aborigines, were successful beyond their hopes, and, in such a career continued for ages...
Page 457 - ... substances the particles move round their own axes, and separate from each other, penetrating in right lines through space. Temperature may be conceived to depend upon the velocities of the vibrations ; increase of capacity on the motion being performed in greater space; and the diminution of temperature during the conversion of solids into...
Page 457 - The immediate cause of the phenomena of heat then is motion, and the laws of its communication are precisely the same, as the laws of the communication of motion.
Page 457 - Rumford's experiments, the same piece of metal may be kept hot for any length of time ; so that if heat be pressed out, the quantity must be inexhaustible. When any body is cooled, it occupies a smaller volume than before : it is evident, therefore, that its parts must have approached...
Page 507 - If in two large tall cylindrical Vessels of Glass inverted, two little Thermometers be suspended so as not to touch the Vessels, and the Air be drawn out of one of these Vessels, and these Vessels thus prepared be carried out of a cold place into a warm one; the Thermometer in vacuo will grow warm as much, and almost as soon as the Thermometer which is not in vacuo.
Page 507 - ... and easy transmission? And do not the vibrations of this medium in hot bodies contribute to the intenseness and duration of their heat? And do not hot bodies communicate their heat to contiguous cold ones, by the vibrations of this medium propagated from them into the cold ones?
Page 313 - In the onset, however, we are disappointed to find that none of the recorded names of the Bactrian kings at all resemble that before us ; yet there can be no doubt about any letter but that preceding KOT, which may be either...