Cuba Past and PresentChapman & Hall, 1898 - 284 pages |
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Page 11
... towns , is wretchedly antiquated . Dysentery annually carries off a great number of European colonists , especially children , and cholera . very frequently decimates the blacks and Chinese , without doing the slightest injury to the ...
... towns , is wretchedly antiquated . Dysentery annually carries off a great number of European colonists , especially children , and cholera . very frequently decimates the blacks and Chinese , without doing the slightest injury to the ...
Page 13
... town , in their thousands , accompanied the cortège conveying the coffin to the port , where it was placed on an American steamer to be taken to New York for burial . The local papers contained many really charming sonnets and poems ...
... town , in their thousands , accompanied the cortège conveying the coffin to the port , where it was placed on an American steamer to be taken to New York for burial . The local papers contained many really charming sonnets and poems ...
Page 19
... towns were flooded with French and Italian literature of an advanced kind , and the ex - pupils of the Jesuits devoured the translated works of Voltaire , Rousseau , and Beccaria with an avidity which must have sorely scandalized their ...
... towns were flooded with French and Italian literature of an advanced kind , and the ex - pupils of the Jesuits devoured the translated works of Voltaire , Rousseau , and Beccaria with an avidity which must have sorely scandalized their ...
Page 26
... town , and known as " The American City , " Havana , Cienfuegos , and Santiago . The Spaniards , on the other hand , suspect and dislike the Americans . There are not many English established on the island . The railroads , however ...
... town , and known as " The American City , " Havana , Cienfuegos , and Santiago . The Spaniards , on the other hand , suspect and dislike the Americans . There are not many English established on the island . The railroads , however ...
Page 29
... towns . Not a few died of starvation , and this is one of the main causes which has reduced the coloured population in Cuba much below its natural proportion , to that of other countries , where slavery has lately existed . Many years ...
... towns . Not a few died of starvation , and this is one of the main causes which has reduced the coloured population in Cuba much below its natural proportion , to that of other countries , where slavery has lately existed . Many years ...
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Common terms and phrases
admirable adventurers American appearance Bahamas Bayamo beautiful British buccaneers cane capital Cathedral centre century Cespedes Christopher Columbus church Cienfuegos cigar Cobre colonies coloured coolies Cuba Cuban curious dance death delightful Domenico Colombo dressed England English exceedingly excellent eyes fact famous feet fever flowers French gardens Genoa Genoese gentleman Giovanni Pellegrino gold Government Governor Guajiro hand harbour Havana Havanese head honour imported inhabitants interesting island Italian Jamaica lady land late leaves live Marianao Matanzas Nassau native negroes neighbouring never night Nuevitas picturesque plant plantation planters population present Puerto Principe rebellion rebels remarkable round San Domingo Santiago Santiago de Cuba Savona scene Sierra Maestra slavery slaves soon sort Spain Spaniards Spanish streets sugar Tacon theatre tion tobacco town trade tropical walls West Indian West Indies whilst women
Popular passages
Page 235 - All scattered in the bottom of the sea. Some lay in dead men's skulls ; and, in those holes Where eyes did once inhabit, there were crept (As 'twere in scorn of eyes) reflecting gems, That woo'd the slimy bottom of the deep, And mocked the dead bones that lay scattered by.
Page 46 - ... that after this life there is another, wherein a very different portion is allotted to good and bad men. If therefore you expect to die, and believe, with us, that every one is to be rewarded in a future state according to his conduct in the present, you will do no hurt to those who do none to you.
Page 95 - ... an object of transcendent importance to the commercial and political interests of our Union. Its commanding position, with reference to the Gulf of Mexico and the West India seas; the character of its population; its situation midway between our southern coast and the island of St.
Page 28 - FRANK, the SPANIARD proud, The double SCOT, HIBERNIAN loud, And sullen ENGLISH own The pleasing softness of thy sway, And here, transferr'd allegiance pay, For gracious is thy throne.
Page 276 - ... origin of such tales is probably traceable to the legend related by Oldmixon as far back as 1708. The natives, he said, tell all strangers ... a strange Tale of a vast monstrous Serpent, that had its Abode in the before-mentioned Bottom (an inaccessible Bottom among the high mountains). They affirm'd, there was in the Head of it a very sparkling Stone, like a Carbuncle of inestimable Price ; that the Monster commonly veil'd that rich Jewel with a thin moving skin, like that of a Man's Eyelid,...
Page 277 - They affirmed that there was in the head of it a very sparkling stone, like a carbuncle, of inestimable price, that the monster commonly veiled that rich jewel with a thin moving skin like that of a man's eyelid, and when it went to drink, and sported itself in the deep bottom it fully discovered it, and the rocks all about received a wonderful lustre from the fire issuing out of that precious gem...
Page 80 - Every soldier in the island — and they say that there are twenty-five thousand — must be a Spaniard. The ships of war are commanded and manned by Spaniards. All that is shown before their eyes of brilliancy and power and high place is purely Spanish. No Cuban has any voice in his own country. He can never have the consolation of thinking that his tyrant is his countryman, or reflect that under altered circumstances it might possibly have been his fortune to tyrannize. What love can he have for...
Page 135 - Lady is seated, holding the infant Jesus in her arms. In the corner is a long inscription of some historical importance. It runs thus : — " The Admiral, Don Christopher Columbus, and the Spanish Army, being possessed of the 'Cerro de la Vega...
Page 95 - Havana, fronting a long line of our shores destitute of the same advantage; the nature of its productions and of its wants, furnishing the supplies and needing the returns of a commerce immensely profitable and mutually beneficial, give it an importance in the sum of our national interest, with which that of no other foreign territory can be compared, and little inferior to that which binds the different members of this Union together.