Brazil: Its Condition and Prospects |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 90
Page v
... Brazilian patriots should seriously meditate on a radical change in the Constitution . Discontent was profound . Complaints were outspoken and loud . Eloquent edito- rials in popular journals advocated the republic . The Ouro Preto ...
... Brazilian patriots should seriously meditate on a radical change in the Constitution . Discontent was profound . Complaints were outspoken and loud . Eloquent edito- rials in popular journals advocated the republic . The Ouro Preto ...
Page x
... Brazilian territory within twenty- four hours . To avoid , however , any popular manifesta- tion and possible disturbance , he was required to leave be- tween two and three o'clock on the morning of the 17th . From the palace to the ...
... Brazilian territory within twenty- four hours . To avoid , however , any popular manifesta- tion and possible disturbance , he was required to leave be- tween two and three o'clock on the morning of the 17th . From the palace to the ...
Page xii
... Brazilian revolution has been carried out with a sobriety , a coolness , an attention to detail , and a general finish about all the arrangements , which in all the circumstances of the case are really remarkable . " The Constituent ...
... Brazilian revolution has been carried out with a sobriety , a coolness , an attention to detail , and a general finish about all the arrangements , which in all the circumstances of the case are really remarkable . " The Constituent ...
Page xiv
... Brazilian squadron , under command of Rear- Admiral da Silveira , on a complimentary visit to the Government of the United States , was an event very gratifying to Americans , as it indicated the cultivation of more friendly and ...
... Brazilian squadron , under command of Rear- Admiral da Silveira , on a complimentary visit to the Government of the United States , was an event very gratifying to Americans , as it indicated the cultivation of more friendly and ...
Page xv
... Brazilian tariff , namely : 1. Schedule of articles to be admitted free into Bra- zil . - Wheat , wheat - flour ; corn or maize , and the manu- factures thereof , including corn - meal and starch ; rye , rye - flour , buckwheat ...
... Brazilian tariff , namely : 1. Schedule of articles to be admitted free into Bra- zil . - Wheat , wheat - flour ; corn or maize , and the manu- factures thereof , including corn - meal and starch ; rye , rye - flour , buckwheat ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
acres Agassiz agricultural Amazon Valley American appearance Bahia Brazil Brazilian building Cabinet capital Ceará cents Chamber of Deputies church coffee colony color crop cultivated distance Dom Pedro II eight election emancipation Emperor export feet five forest forty four frequently Government ground half hammock hills hundred Indians interior Iracema João Alfredo labor ladies land Liberal look Manáos ment miles million dollars milreis minister ministry month morning mountains municipal night o'clock onça Ouro Preto Pará party passed Paulo Pedro Pernambuco Petropolis Piracicaba plantations planters Portugal Portuguese Portuguese language pounds present president principal province railway received Rio de Janeiro river River Plate Santos São Paulo seen Senator side situated slavery slaves soil South steamers street-cars streets teachers thousand dollars timber tion trees twelve twenty United usually yellow fever
Popular passages
Page 352 - America," are all but unknown to the outside world; he spent months in the picturesque capital of Rio Janeiro; he visited the coffee districts, studied the slaves, descended the gold-mines, viewed the greatest rapids of the globe, entered the isolated Guianas, and so on.
Page xv - ... the admission into the United States of America free of all duty of the articles enumerated in Section 3 of said Act, the Government of...
Page 299 - Some days afterward the young men belonging to the different sitios agreed to go in search of the serpent. They began in a systematic manner, forming two parties, each embarked in three or four canoes, and starting from points several miles apart, whence they gradually approximated, searching all the little inlets on both sides the river. The reptile was found at last sunning itself on a log at the mouth of a muddy rivulet, and dispatched with harpoons. I saw it the day after it was killed ; it was...
Page 277 - Mandos so diversified. . . . Then the element of human life and habitations is utterly wanting ; one often travels for a day without meeting even so much as a hut. But, if men are not to be seen, animals are certainly plenty ; as our steamer puffs along, great...
Page 285 - Let any one who doubts the evil of this mixture of races, and is inclined,, from a mistaken philanthropy, to break down all barriers between them, come to Brazil. He cannot deny the deterioration consequent upon an amalgamation of races, more widespread here than in any other country in the world, and which is rapidly effacing the best qualities of the white man, the negro, and the Indian, leaving a mongrel nondescript type, deficient in physical and mental energy.
Page 279 - The dresses," says Mrs. Agassiz, " were of every variety, from silks and satins to stuff-gowns, and the complexions of all tints, from the genuine negro through paler shades of Indian and negro to white. There is absolutely no distinction of color here ; a black lady (always supposing her to be free) is treated with as much consideration and meets with as much attention as a white one. It is, however, rare to see a person in society who can be called a genuine negro ; but there are many mulattoes...
Page 94 - In their country, the physical causes arc so active, and do their work on a scale of such unrivalled magnitude, that it has hitherto been found impossible to escape from the effects of their united action. The progress of agriculture is stopped by impassable forests, and the harvests are destroyed by innumerable insects. The mountains are too high to scale, the rivers are too wide to bridge; every thing is contrived to keep back the human mind, and repress its rising ambition.
Page 94 - Brazil, which is nearly as large as the whole of Europe, is covered with a vegetation of incredible profusion. Indeed, so rank and luxuriant is the growth, that Nature seems to riot in the very wantonness of power.
Page 352 - AROUND AND ABOUT SOUTH AMERICA: •**• Twenty Months of Quest and Query. By FRANK VINCENT, author of "The Land of the White Elephant,
Page xv - Lard and substitutes therefor. Bacon hams. Butter and cheese. Canned and preserved meats, fish, fruits, and vegetables. Manufactures of cotton, including cotton clothing. Manufactures of iron and steel, single or mixed, not included in the foregoing tree schedule.