free hosting   image hosting   hosting reseller   online album   e-shop   famous people 
Free Website Templates
Free Installer

Boulder Place Directory 06
Page 08

A good combination for Boulder Place includes all ingredients.

Boulder Place

Boulder Place Home

Boulder Place Sitemap

Boulder Place Dir 01

Boulder Place Dir 02

Boulder Place Dir 03

Boulder Place Dir 04

Boulder Place Dir 05

Boulder Place Dir 06

Boulder Place Dir 07

Boulder Place Dir 08

Boulder Place Dir 09

Boulder Place Dir 10

Boulder Place Dir 11

Boulder Place Dir 12

Boulder Place Dir 13

Boulder Place Dir 14

Boulder Place Dir 15

Boulder Place Dir 16

Boulder Place Dir 17

Boulder Place Dir 18

Boulder Place Dir 19

Boulder Place Dir 20

Boulder Place Directory 06
Page 08

The reign of King Charles the Second was signalized by many other untoward and disastrous events besides those which we have enumerated. There were unfortunate wars, great defeats in naval battles, unlucky negotiations abroad, and plots and conspiracies, dangerous and disgraceful, at home. The king, however, took all these things very good naturedly, and allowed them to interfere very little with his own personal pleasures. Whatever troubles or embarrassments affected the state, he left the anxiety and care which pertained to them to his ministers and his council, banishing all solicitude from his own mind, and enjoying himself all the time with his experiments, his ladies, his dogs, and his perpetual fun.

The Argus is a bird with magnificent plumage; it inhabits the forests of Java and Sumatra, and takes its place beside the pheasant, from which it only differs in being unprovided with spurs, and by the extraordinary development of the secondary feathers of the wings in the male. The tail is large and round, and the two middle feathers are extremely long and quite straight. When paraded, as it struts round the female, spreading its wings and tail, this bird presents to the dazzled eye of the spectator two splendid bronze-colored fans, upon which is sprinkled a profusion of bright marks much resembling eyes. It owes its name of Argus to these spots.

On October 1st we had more trouble cutting our way through, as we again found great ferns and palms, especially near streamlets of water, and quantities of fallen trees, which made us continually deviate from our direction. The forest was indeed dirty and much entangled in that section, and thus made our march painful, liane catching my feet and head all the time, tearing my ears and nose--especially when the man who walked in front of me let them go suddenly and they swung right in my face. Thorns dug big grooves into my legs, arms and hands. To make matters worse, the high fever seemed to exhaust me terribly. Worse luck, a huge boil, as big as an egg, developed under my left knee, while another of equal size appeared on my right ankle, already much swollen and aching. The huge shoes given me by the trader--of the cheapest manufacture--had already fallen to pieces. I had turned the soles of them into sandals, held up by numerous bits of string, which cut my toes and ankles very badly every time I knocked my feet against a tree or stone. My feet were full of thorns, so numerous that I had not the energy to remove them. The left leg was absolutely stiff with the big boil, and I could not bend it.


[ Sec 06 Part 01 ] [ Sec 06 Part 02 ] [ Sec 06 Part 03 ] [ Sec 06 Part 04 ] [ Sec 06 Part 05 ]
[ Sec 06 Part 06 ] [ Sec 06 Part 07 ] [ Sec 06 Part 08 ] [ Sec 06 Part 09 ] [ Sec 06 Part 10 ]


This page is Copyright © Boulder Place and all rights are reserved. Please don't copy without proper authorization. References to other Web sites are not endorsements. Boulder Place makes no promises about the quality or content of other sites that are linked to.