| Henry Thoby Prinsep - 1820 - 530 pagina’s
...and for servants and followers every man's tent was his only receptacle, and himself the only doctor. provision had been made by the previous distribution...sick. Such indeed was the general distress, that, so long as the epidemic raged, even the healthy were broken in spirit, and incapable of labour or fatigue;... | |
| Henry Thoby Prinsep - 1825 - 516 pagina’s
...days to move eastward, in the hope of finding a better climate, as soon as it should reach the Betwa ; but each day of march many dead and dying were abandoned...was the general distress, that, so * The narrator himself lost seven domestic servants and a moonshee in about four days, besides twelve others who were... | |
| Henry Thoby Prinsep - 1825 - 506 pagina’s
...days to move eastward, in the hope of finding a better climate, as soon as it should reach the Betwa ; but each day of march many dead and dying were abandoned...was the general- distress, that, so * The narrator himself lost seven domestic servants and a moonshee in about four days, besides twelve others who were... | |
| Charles MacFarlane - 1853 - 672 pagina’s
...the road, — so many that it was not possible to furnish the means for carrying them on, although the utmost possible provision had been made by the previous distribution of bullock-carta and elephants for the ^accommodation of the sick. Nothing was heard along the "line of... | |
| Charles MacFarlane - 1853 - 718 pagina’s
...the road, — so many that it was not possible to furnish the means for carrying them on, although the utmost possible provision had been made by the previous distribution of bullock-carts and elephants for the accommodation of the sick. Nothing was heard along the line of... | |
| Harriet Martineau - 1858 - 794 pagina’s
...on the road — so many that it was not possible to furnish the means for carrying them on, although the utmost possible provision had been made by the previous distribution of bullock-carts and elephants for the accommodation of the sick. Nothing was heard along the line of... | |
| Harriet Martineau - 1865 - 512 pagina’s
...on the road — so many that it was not possible to furnish the means for carrying them on, although the utmost possible provision had been made by the previous distribution of bullock-carts and elephants for the accommodation of the sick. Nothing was heard along the line of... | |
| Charles MacFarlane - 1873 - 698 pagina’s
...on the road,—so many that it was not possible to furnish the means for carrying them on, although the utmost possible provision had been made by the previous distribution of bullock-carts and elephants for the accommodation of the sick. Nothing was heard along the line of... | |
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