Travels in Peru and India, While Superintending the Collection of Chinchona Plants and Seeds in South America, and Their Introduction Into India |
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Page vi
... Incas , will , I trust , not be unwelcome . I have devoted three chapters to these subjects , which will form a short digression on our way to the Chinchona forests . I am indebted to the late General Miller , and to Dr. Vigil , the ...
... Incas , will , I trust , not be unwelcome . I have devoted three chapters to these subjects , which will form a short digression on our way to the Chinchona forests . I am indebted to the late General Miller , and to Dr. Vigil , the ...
Page xii
... Incas 134 CHAPTER X. Diego Tupac Amaru - Fate of the Inca's family - Insurrection of Puma- cagua 158 CHAPTER XI . Journey from Puno to Crucero , the capital of Caravaya 180 CHAPTER XII . THE PROVINCE OF CARAVAYA , A short historical and ...
... Incas 134 CHAPTER X. Diego Tupac Amaru - Fate of the Inca's family - Insurrection of Puma- cagua 158 CHAPTER XI . Journey from Puno to Crucero , the capital of Caravaya 180 CHAPTER XII . THE PROVINCE OF CARAVAYA , A short historical and ...
Page xvi
... Incas of Peru The Sondor - huasi , at Azangaro Chinchona Nitida Trees .. Chinchona Chahuarguera Canoe on the Beypoor river Capsules and parts of the flower of Chinchona Chahuarguera- magnified and natural size PAGE Frontispiece . to ...
... Incas of Peru The Sondor - huasi , at Azangaro Chinchona Nitida Trees .. Chinchona Chahuarguera Canoe on the Beypoor river Capsules and parts of the flower of Chinchona Chahuarguera- magnified and natural size PAGE Frontispiece . to ...
Page 2
... Incas , certainly gives some countenance to this idea . It seems probable , nevertheless , that the Indians were aware of the virtues of Peruvian bark in the neighbourhood of Loxa , 230 miles south of Quito , where its use was first ...
... Incas , certainly gives some countenance to this idea . It seems probable , nevertheless , that the Indians were aware of the virtues of Peruvian bark in the neighbourhood of Loxa , 230 miles south of Quito , where its use was first ...
Page 74
... Incas Nature has done her work on a truly gigantic scale . The desert , from Guerreros to the entrance to the gorge leading through the rocky hills which divide it from the plain of Arequipa , is upwards of forty miles across , while ...
... Incas Nature has done her work on a truly gigantic scale . The desert , from Guerreros to the entrance to the gorge leading through the rocky hills which divide it from the plain of Arequipa , is upwards of forty miles across , while ...
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Common terms and phrases
alkaloids amongst Arequipa Aymara Azangaro Badagas bark Bolivia botanist Brahmins Cacique Calisaya called Caravaya cascarilla chinchona chinchona forests chinchona-plants chinchona-trees climate coast coca collected commenced Coonoor Coorg cordillera corregidors cotton covered cultivation cura Cuzco descended dollars elevation febrifugal feet high flowers ghaut Government grassy growing Hasskarl height Huanuco Inca Inca Tupac Amaru Indians Islay Java José Juliaca lake lake Titicaca land leagues leaves Lima Loxa Madura Malabar McIvor micrantha miles mita mountains mules Mysore native Neilgherry hills Ootacamund Paucartambo Pavon peaks Peru Peruvian plain plantations plants province Pulneys Puno Quichua quinine quinquina rain ravine red-bark region river road rock round Sandia seeds sent side Sispara Siva slopes soil South America Spaniards Spanish species of chinchona Spruce stone succirubra supply Tambopata Titicaca town trees Tungasuca Tupac Amaru valley valuable species viceroy village Wardian Weddell yield young
Popular passages
Page 227 - Crimes were once so little known among them that an Indian with one hundred thousand pieces of gold and silver in his house left it open, only placing a little stick across the door as a sign that the master was out, and nobody went in. But when they saw that we placed locks and keys on our doors, they understood that it was from fear of thieves, and when they saw that we had thieves amongst us, they despised us.
Page 227 - Full-faced above the valley stood the moon ; And like a downward smoke, the slender stream Along the cliff to fall and pause and fall did seem.
Page 7 - Locke's and all our ingeniouse and able doctors' method " of treating this disease with the Peruvian bark ; adding, " I am satisfied, that of all medicines, if it be good of its kind, and properly given, it is the most innocent and effectual, whatever bugbear the world makes of it, especially the tribe of inferior physicians, from whom it cuts off so much business and gain.
Page 404 - The women run with them, like wild goats, their children slung on their hips. The Poliars occasionally trade with the country people, who place cotton and grain on some stone, and the wild creatures, as soon as the strangers are out of sight, take them and put honey in their place, but they will allow no one to come near them.
Page 345 - A man's moveable property, after his death, is divided equally among the sons and daughters of all his sisters. His landed estate is managed by the eldest male of the family; but each individual has a right to a share of the income.
Page 255 - They are the size of large pigeons, with orangescarlet feathers on the head, neck, breast, and tail, black wings, light-grey back, and scarlet crest. They have a shrill, harsh cry. The butterflies and moths were numerous and brilliant, but so tame, and in such swarms, as to be a perfect plague. There was one bright swallowtail, with blue wings, fringed with crimson. The torments from venomous insects were maddening ; especially from a kind of fly which in a moment raised swellings and blood-red lumps...
Page 45 - Humboldt reported that 25,000 chinchona-trees were destroyed every year, and Ruiz § protested against the custom of barking the trees, and leaving them to be destroyed by rot. But nothing was ever done in the way of conservancy, either by the Government, or by private speculators whose subsistence depended on a continued supply of bark.
Page 4 - In 1638 the wife of Luis Geronimo Fernandez de Cabrera Bobadilla y Mendoza, fourth Count of Chinchon, lay sick of an intermittent fever in the palace at Lima.