Page:Siam and Laos, as seen by our American missionaries (1884).pdf/23

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SIAM AND LAOS.

PART I.
SIAM.

CHAPTER I.
THE INDO-CHINESE PENINSULA.

WHEN about to visit a foreign country the prudent traveler is careful to seek in guide-books and from maps some data in regard to its position, prominent features and relation to adjacent regions. Such information adds interest to each stage of his journey. Climbing a mountain, he overlooks two kingdoms. Such a valley opens into a rich mining district; the highlanders of that range are descendants of the original lords of the soil; the navigability of this river is of commercial importance as a possible trade-route.

In like manner, bold outlines of the whole peninsula furnish the best introduction to a careful study of Central Indo-China, showing the trade-connection of Northern Laos with Burmah and the richest mining province of China, and the relation of Siamese progress to

certain Asiatic commercial problems. New views

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