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Browsing named entities in a specific section of The Daily Dispatch: April 24, 1862., [Electronic resource]. Search the whole document.
Found 11 total hits in 4 results.
Pekin (Illinois, United States) (search for this): article 7
The great wall of China.
--Mr. Font blanque communicates to the London Times a graphic description of a visit to the great wall of China.
The following are extracts:
I left Tish- on the 18th of March, and after a three days ride through as uninteresting a country as can well be conceived, came in sight of the fine solid wall which encloses the straggling mass of ruin, dirt and decay, called Pekin.
At day break on the following morning we climbed the highest peak of the mountain range, and there, standing on the top of the wall, reflected upon the stupendous folly of this wonderful work of human industry, which is said to have cost the country two hundred thousand lives from sheer exhaustion.
The wall, which is built of stone and brick, is twenty feet nigh and fifteen feet broad, surmounted by a double parapet, loopholed on the north side.
As far as the eye can follow the mountain range it winds over the ridges of the precipitous black rocks like a gigantic serpent crawl
China (China) (search for this): article 7
The great wall of China.
--Mr. Font blanque communicates to the London Times a graphic description of a visit to the great wall of China.
The following are extracts:
I left Tish- on the 18th of March, and after a three days ride through as uninteresting a country as can well be conceived, came in sight of the fine solid wall which encloses the straggling mass of ruin, dirt and decay, called Pekin.
At day break on the following morning we climbed the highest peak of the mountain ranChina.
The following are extracts:
I left Tish- on the 18th of March, and after a three days ride through as uninteresting a country as can well be conceived, came in sight of the fine solid wall which encloses the straggling mass of ruin, dirt and decay, called Pekin.
At day break on the following morning we climbed the highest peak of the mountain range, and there, standing on the top of the wall, reflected upon the stupendous folly of this wonderful work of human industry, which is said to have cost the country two hundred thousand lives from sheer exhaustion.
The wall, which is built of stone and brick, is twenty feet nigh and fifteen feet broad, surmounted by a double parapet, loopholed on the north side.
As far as the eye can follow the mountain range it winds over the ridges of the precipitous black rocks like a gigantic serpent craw
Font (search for this): article 7
The great wall of China.
--Mr. Font blanque communicates to the London Times a graphic description of a visit to the great wall of China.
The following are extracts:
I left Tish- on the 18th of March, and after a three days ride through as uninteresting a country as can well be conceived, came in sight of the fine solid wall which encloses the straggling mass of ruin, dirt and decay, called Pekin.
At day break on the following morning we climbed the highest peak of the mountain range, and there, standing on the top of the wall, reflected upon the stupendous folly of this wonderful work of human industry, which is said to have cost the country two hundred thousand lives from sheer exhaustion.
The wall, which is built of stone and brick, is twenty feet nigh and fifteen feet broad, surmounted by a double parapet, loopholed on the north side.
As far as the eye can follow the mountain range it winds over the ridges of the precipitous black rocks like a gigantic serpent crawli
March 18th (search for this): article 7
The great wall of China.
--Mr. Font blanque communicates to the London Times a graphic description of a visit to the great wall of China.
The following are extracts:
I left Tish- on the 18th of March, and after a three days ride through as uninteresting a country as can well be conceived, came in sight of the fine solid wall which encloses the straggling mass of ruin, dirt and decay, called Pekin.
At day break on the following morning we climbed the highest peak of the mountain range, and there, standing on the top of the wall, reflected upon the stupendous folly of this wonderful work of human industry, which is said to have cost the country two hundred thousand lives from sheer exhaustion.
The wall, which is built of stone and brick, is twenty feet nigh and fifteen feet broad, surmounted by a double parapet, loopholed on the north side.
As far as the eye can follow the mountain range it winds over the ridges of the precipitous black rocks like a gigantic serpent crawli