INDEX. 



393 



Challenger, H.M.S., at Tristan d'A- 

 cuiiba, 26 ; expedition, 109 



Chaloupe, of English captain, 150 ; of 

 company, 156, 165 



Chaloupes and tislier-boats at Batavia, 

 226 



Chamberlain, Dr., Present State of 

 England, bj^, 51 



Chamberlain, Lord High, Ixxi 



Chamisso, 66 



Champion of the party, M. Benelle,141 



Channel, buoyed, 119; the English, 16 



Chansons, de Clement Marot, 284 



Chajjel of branches, burnt, 180 



Chapell, Wm., 39 



Chapels of Chinese, 257 



Chaplets of beads, worn by Chinese 

 priests, 257 



Charibbeau cabbages, 44 



Charity of Chinese, 243 ; of Hotten- 

 tots, 293 



Charrou. Bois, 329 



Charles I, Ivi ; Charles II, 51 ; Charles 

 V, Emperor, Ixxxi 



Charts of, Diego Kibero. 303 ; Diego 

 Ruys, 1 ; Grand Porfc, 161 ; Masca- 

 rene Archipelago, 309 ; MathurinBay, 

 48 ; R'.'uuion, 319 ; Rodriguez, xx 



Charybdis upon Scylla, Ixxxii 



Chasse-maree, 119 



Cheer, good, without brqad, at Ro- 

 drujue, Ixxxvi, 105 



Cheik, Ibu Molana, an Arabian in- 

 vader of Java, 267 



Chelouian order, 373 ; ancient race, 

 374, 375 



Cheribon, magnificent tomb at, 268 



Chess, game of, 104 



Chests, in the bark, 113 



Chicoree, Cichorhuii, 56, 57 



Chief Justice of Bourbon, 3 



Chiefs, hereditary, or kings of South 

 Africa, 294 



Chiefs : The chiefs of the peojjle are 

 imid for endeavouring to make them 

 happy. They are ofteutimes occa- 

 sions of the sins and misfortunes of 

 the people, 244, 245 



Chiendent, a herb, 333 



Child of Geneva, 191 



Children, Hottentot, instruction of, 

 desirable, 298 



" Chillou, Prisoner of," by Byron, 170 



Chimene, la belle, 121 



China, pictures from, 241 



China gold fish, 205 



China pork, 231 



Chinese in Java, 225, 236, 241 ; com- 

 pany at Batavia occupies a suburb, 

 ib. ; capitation impost on, 241 



Chineses, have burying-places and 

 pagodes at Batavia, 225, 227 ; they 

 make a great figure there, 241; there 

 ai'e above ten thousand of them, 

 ■ih. ; they j^ay a crown a mouth 

 to the company, 242 ; have a chief 

 who sits in the council, and has a 

 vote in case of the condemning 

 of any of that nation, ib. ; their 

 character, ibid. ; are very politick, 

 ib. ; their manners and customs, 

 their i:)riuciples aliout charitj^, are 

 conformable to those of our Saviour, 

 243 ; an extract of one of their 

 books, intitled " The Golden Book", 

 ib, ; their tables, 252 ; their man- 

 ner of dressing, 251 ; their trade, 

 ib. ; their marriages, 252 ; their 

 divertisements, 253 ; make no 

 scruple of sodomy, ib. ; their bu- 

 rials, 256 ; absurd questions they 

 ask those that are about to die, 



255 ; carry presents to their tombs, 



256 ; their pagodes much like Ro- 

 man Catbolick churches, as well as 

 the ornaments of their jjriests, 257 ; 

 their worship, 258 ; their bead rolls, 



257 ; they worship but one God, 



258 ; chastise their subaltern dei- 

 ties when they don't do their duty, 



259 ; Chineses that are not settled 

 at Bataria, can't stay there but 

 six months, 251 ; why they wear 

 a tuft of hair, 251 ; the opinion 

 of the Chinese j^hilosopher con- 

 cerning the duty of great men and 

 of those that goveru'd the people, 

 224 



Choisy, Abbe de, xxx, Ixxvii, Ixxviii 

 223 



Chojisticks of the Chinese, 251 



Christian converts, male and female, 

 in Java, 268 



Christian inhabitants at the Cape, 

 296 



Christianity, in what it consists, 242, 

 243 ; is unhappily divided, althoucrh 

 all agree in fundamental points, 

 268 



Christians, successors to the Israel- 

 ites, 129 



Chronological History of Plants, by 

 Dr. Pickering, 264 



Chronology of events, 1 



Chuang 'Tze and Sao, Chinese sages, 

 243 



Church, Malay converts in, 268 ; 

 French, at Dj-akenstein, 283 ; pas- 

 tor of, ibid. ; Walloon, at Ley den 

 148 



DD 



