4o 



Burmese, Bugk, Javanese, a»d oth«r 

 people from every part ot Ucetinica. 



A ciiam of lUimntaiiis cro8acs tbe 

 territai7 'of tite Peuttisula Uom one 

 part 10 tlie other, &nd teems to be a 

 contiDuailuti of tlic one which begins 

 in Ai^iiatti aqd ends wUhout Interrup- 

 tion at piitnt Hotiiania, in tlie ^Cruiti 

 of Sinagpore, wlilch is the fartheet ex- 

 tremity of aoytlier^ Asia, j From these 

 mountains, some of ,wbisb are great! j 

 elevated, 'fiow^ on both sideB several 

 ttiifl^ble nrers and rivulets ^hlch 

 fertiJiae the Country md would iidmi- 

 rably help the peop e in exporiiuf^ tbetr 

 products to the cuastunU ttie iimrkdis 

 of Europeans, mid xhuA would become 

 to tbera an jn exbaMatible source of 

 ridieSf ;if they knei.v liuw to use tijia 

 £reH!»ure tint lire placed At their 

 disposal. The ^^plrued traveller, who 

 winders in the^c immense deaerti, 

 meets nofv^and then, a| a far distance 

 from each other^ eome plcturei^que 

 scetiea, w^hlch, by agreeably plefi^ing 

 his sight, make him forget ihe fetiguea 

 he Imi escperieneeii tu climb the motin- 

 tainj?, wadii the riverp an*l marshy places 

 with nhich the couatry >houDdti» and 

 ran through the imraenae forest, which 

 no road croaaeg,— pleasures Jhoweter 

 ivhich the travelter buys at the price 

 of hh bluud which l& uumerelfulty and 

 abundantly sucked hy the luecbea of 

 the marshy places ^and forest. The 



