| General history - 1814 - 798 sider
...repeated several times, the whole body, on one side, joined in the responses to the whole corresponding body on the opposite side, as the semicircle advanced...they finished, by singing and dancing as they had be* gun. These two last dances we** performed with so much spirit, and so great exactness, that they... | |
| William Mariner - 1817 - 632 sider
...a smart " clapping of the hands, and a kind of savage " holla ! or shriek, not unlike what is someu times practised in the comic dances in our " European...applauses at some particular parts ; and even " a stranger who never saw the diversion before " felt similar satisfaction at the same instant. *' For though,... | |
| James Cook - 1821 - 488 sider
...repeated several times, the whole body on one side joined in the responses to the whole corresponding body on the opposite side, as the semi-circle advanced...applauses at some particular parts ; and even a stranger, who never saw the diversion before, felt similar satisfaction, at the same instant. For though, through... | |
| Robert Kerr - 1824 - 532 sider
...repeated several times, the whole body, on one side, joined in the responses to the whole corresponding body on the opposite side, as the semicircle advanced...applauses at some particular parts ; and even a stranger, who never saw the diversion before, felt similar satisfaction, at the same instant. For though, through... | |
| James Cook - 1842 - 644 sider
...repeated several times, the whole body on one side joined in the responses to the whole corresponding body on the opposite side, as the semicircle advanced...applauses at some particular parts ; and even a stranger, who never saw the diversion before, felt similar satisfaction, at the same instant. For though, through... | |
| David Laing Purves - 1874 - 856 sider
...repeated several times, the whole body on one side joined in the responses to the whole corresponding body on the opposite side, as the semicircle advanced...applauses at some particular parts ; and even a stranger, who never saw the diversion before, felt similar satisfaction at the same instant. For though, through... | |
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