Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Sketch Map to elucidate recent exploration on the TIBETO-CHINESE FRONTIER
- ILLUSTRATIONS and MAPS to VOL. I
- Errata in Vol. I
- INTRODUCTORY ESSAY
- CHAPTER I ‘OVER THE SEAS AND FAR AWAY’
- CHAPTER II ‘CHINA'S STUPENDOUS MOUND’
- CHAPTER III ‘ATHWART THE FLATS AND ROUNDING GRAY’
- CHAPTER IV ‘A CYCLE OF CATHAY’
- CHAPTER V THE OCEAN RIVER
- CHAPTER VI THE GORGES OF THE GREAT RIVER
- CHAPTER VII CH'UNG-CH'ING TO CH'ÊNG-TU-FU
- CHAPTER VIII A LOOP-CAST TOWARDS THE NORTHERN ALPS
- CHAPTER IX A LOOP-CAST TOWARDS THE NORTHERN ALPS—continued
- Plate section
INTRODUCTORY ESSAY
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 March 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Sketch Map to elucidate recent exploration on the TIBETO-CHINESE FRONTIER
- ILLUSTRATIONS and MAPS to VOL. I
- Errata in Vol. I
- INTRODUCTORY ESSAY
- CHAPTER I ‘OVER THE SEAS AND FAR AWAY’
- CHAPTER II ‘CHINA'S STUPENDOUS MOUND’
- CHAPTER III ‘ATHWART THE FLATS AND ROUNDING GRAY’
- CHAPTER IV ‘A CYCLE OF CATHAY’
- CHAPTER V THE OCEAN RIVER
- CHAPTER VI THE GORGES OF THE GREAT RIVER
- CHAPTER VII CH'UNG-CH'ING TO CH'ÊNG-TU-FU
- CHAPTER VIII A LOOP-CAST TOWARDS THE NORTHERN ALPS
- CHAPTER IX A LOOP-CAST TOWARDS THE NORTHERN ALPS—continued
- Plate section
Summary
§ 1. My friends, the author and the publisher of this work, have called on me to write a preface to it. I confess to a strong interest in the book, which I have seen through the press from first to last, during Captain Gill's absence on duty in the Levant. That is, indeed, an office which nature does not easily permit to be done by deputy; and I am told that I have left some of his flowers only planted, when they ought to have flaunted, and his banners to flatter when they ought to flutter, whilst I have made his bells to twinkle when they only tinkled.
But my interest in the journey which the book relates began long before the book was even an embryo, and with the first hour of my acquaintance with its author. Three years and a half ago, he was indeed well known to me by name as a brother officer who had been an enterprising traveller on the Turkoman frontier of Persia, and a still more enterprising candidate for a metropolitan borough. But we had never met when, in the end of May 1876, Captain Gill visited me at the India Office, and announced that he was meditating an expedition, by way of Western China, into either Eastern Turkestan or Tibet.
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- Information
- The River of Golden SandThe Narrative of a Journey through China and Eastern Tibet to Burmah, pp. xv - xcviPublisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010First published in: 1880