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The Daily Dispatch: may 29, 1861., [Electronic resource] 11 11 Browse Search
The Daily Dispatch: may 28, 1861., [Electronic resource] 4 4 Browse Search
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hen the number of pieces of cloth were not divisible by ten, a pieces was torn asunder. As boats were not to be hired, Mr. Gouger bought a couple of canoes to carry himself and cargo up the Irrawaddi to the seat of government. The river is easily nto admit of your being taken out of it by the alligators. During the six weeks occupied by this transit, the assiduous Mr. Gouger made himself master of the Burmese language. He found Amerapoorah in a state of transition, because the king had takenhly honored by the gift--horribile diclum! --popped the nasty morsel into her mouth and completed its mastication. Mr. Gouger concluded from this that the king and queen of Burmah were a very good natured, though rather a vulgar couple; but a nal, ready to receive his majesty's devotions, pretending to offer up prayers for the averting of the sing's wrath." Mr. Gouger had not to wait long before he was himself a witness to the "tantrums" into which the sovereign could put himself on o
composed of anything but beauties, and gave Mr. Gouger, at first, a bad idea of the royal taste. H For a considerable time, the indefatigable Mr. Gouger--making the most satisfactory bargains, and court of course participated in the change. Mr. Gouger was seized upon as a British spy, and upon tthe opinion that the H. E. I. C. had married Mr. Gouger's sister. On these charges, he was hurried to exempt from pain.' The other six who were Mr. Gouger's companions on the bamboo were the followingraphical Burmese; and two Hindu servants of Mr. Gouger. All conversation, even moanings themselvese occasion, actually chained to a leper, did Mr. Gouger contrive for more than a year to retain not old one serves for the purpose. Neither Mr. Gouger, however, nor any of his European fellow-sufto tell us of them? In his extreme modesty, Mr. Gouger apologises for having published this narrati There is one lesson we may all learn from Mr. Gouger's volume, and of which we have most of us no[1 more...]