Public Domain

Far Off Or Asia And Australia Described With Anecdotes And Illu

Note: Project Gutenberg also has an HTML version of this file which includes the original illustrations. See 13011-h.htm or 13011-h.zip: (https://www.gutenberg.org/1/3/0/1/13011/13011-h/13011-h.htm) or (https://www.gutenberg.org/1/3/0/1/13011/13011-h.zip)

Chapters

3. Chapter 3

Was Christ ever known in this Mahomedan land? Yes, long before he was known in England. Turkey in Asia used to be called Asia Minor, (or Asia the less,) and there it was that Pa...

2. Chapter 2

The traveller earnestly desired to behold the cedars of Lebanon: for a great deal is said about them in the Bible; indeed, the temple of Solomon was built of those cedars. It wa...

12. Chapter 12

When Chun and Han had been three years in the school, their mother wanted them to leave, and to come with her to her home. The girls were grieved at the thought of leaving their...

6. Chapter 6

But the sudras are not the _most_ despised people. Far from it. It is those who have no caste at all who are the most despised. They are called pariahs. These are people who hav...

4. Chapter 4

The Chinese do not keep all the tea-leaves; they pack up a great many in boxes, and send them to distant lands. In England and in Russia there is a tea-kettle in every cottage....

15. Chapter 15

The women are the most ill-treated creatures in the world. The men beat them on their heads whenever they please, and cover them with bruises. A gentleman once saw a poor black...

14. Chapter 14

Many people have come from Malacca, and settled in Borneo; so the island is full of Malays. These people have a cunning and cruel look, and no wonder;--for many of them are PIRA...

8. Chapter 8

Once a Circassian said to his Russian slave, "I am going to send you back to Russia." The man fell at his master's feet, saying, "Rather than do so, use me as your dog; beat me,...

11. Chapter 11

Greater sorrows still, soon befell the little family. One day, a messenger came to the cottage, with the sad tidings that the bamboo hut had been torn down, the mat, and pillow...

9. Chapter 9

The city where he dwells is called Bokhara (which is also the name of the whole country). His palace is on a high mound, in the midst of splendid mosques, and mansions. Amongst...

5. Chapter 5

The mandarins (or rulers of towns) often sentence offenders to lie upon the ground, and to have thirty strokes of the bamboo. But the wooden collar is worse than the bamboo stic...

7. Chapter 7

There is a tribe in India called Khunds; and they sprinkle their fields with children's blood, and they say this is the way to make the corn grow. The English government once re...

10. Chapter 10

During the voyage, a furious storm arose, and all on board despaired of life. _Then_ it was the youth remembered the prayers he had offered up by his dying father's bed; _then_...

1. Chapter 1

Note: Project Gutenberg also has an HTML version of this file which includes the original illustrations. See 13011-h.htm or 13011-h.zip: (https://www.gutenberg.org/1/3/0/1/13011...

13. Chapter 13

But the ship that would do the most good to Kamkatka, is a missionary ship. The Greek church is the religion; but _no_ religion is much thought of in Kamkatka; hunting and fishi...

16. Chapter 16

Just as the travellers had finished their evening meal, they were astonished to see the two runaway boys approaching. Wylie came running up, declaring that both he and his compa...