The Works of Francis Parkman: A half-century of conflictLittle, Brown, 1897 |
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Sida viii
... Rouville . - A Frontier Village . - Rev. John Williams . -The Surprise . - Defence of the Stebbins House . — At- tempted Rescue . - The Meadow Fight . - The Captives . - The Northward March . Mrs. Williams killed . - The Min- ister's ...
... Rouville . - A Frontier Village . - Rev. John Williams . -The Surprise . - Defence of the Stebbins House . — At- tempted Rescue . - The Meadow Fight . - The Captives . - The Northward March . Mrs. Williams killed . - The Min- ister's ...
Sida xiii
... ROUVILLE From the original painting owned by Mrs. H. de Rouville , Montreal . THE RETURN FROM Deerfield From a painting by Howard Pyle . COTTON MATHER • • From a mezzotint engraving after a painting by P. Pelham . MOHAWK CHIEFS . I ...
... ROUVILLE From the original painting owned by Mrs. H. de Rouville , Montreal . THE RETURN FROM Deerfield From a painting by Howard Pyle . COTTON MATHER • • From a mezzotint engraving after a painting by P. Pelham . MOHAWK CHIEFS . I ...
Sida 54
... in Massachusetts Archives ; Richard Waldron to Governor Dudley , Portsmouth , 19 September , 1712 ; Bourne , Wells and Kennebunk , 278 . CHAPTER IV . 1704-1740 . DEERFIELD . HERTEL DE ROUVILLE 54 [ 1712 . QUEEN ANNE'S WAR .
... in Massachusetts Archives ; Richard Waldron to Governor Dudley , Portsmouth , 19 September , 1712 ; Bourne , Wells and Kennebunk , 278 . CHAPTER IV . 1704-1740 . DEERFIELD . HERTEL DE ROUVILLE 54 [ 1712 . QUEEN ANNE'S WAR .
Sida 55
Francis Parkman. CHAPTER IV . 1704-1740 . DEERFIELD . HERTEL DE ROUVILLE . - A FRONTIER VILLAGE . WILLIAMS . THE SURPRISE . - DEFENCE OF - - - - - - REV . JOHN THE STEBBINS HOUSE . ATTEMPTED RESCUE . THE MEADOW FIGHT . THE CAPTIVES ...
Francis Parkman. CHAPTER IV . 1704-1740 . DEERFIELD . HERTEL DE ROUVILLE . - A FRONTIER VILLAGE . WILLIAMS . THE SURPRISE . - DEFENCE OF - - - - - - REV . JOHN THE STEBBINS HOUSE . ATTEMPTED RESCUE . THE MEADOW FIGHT . THE CAPTIVES ...
Sida 56
... Rouville , who was accompanied by four of his brothers . They began their march in the depth of winter , journeyed nearly three hundred miles on snow - shoes through the forest , and approached their destination on the afternoon of the ...
... Rouville , who was accompanied by four of his brothers . They began their march in the depth of winter , journeyed nearly three hundred miles on snow - shoes through the forest , and approached their destination on the afternoon of the ...
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Abenakis Acadians Annapolis attack Beauharnois Bienville Boston Bourgmont British Brouillan Cadillac called Canada Canadian canoes Captain captives captured Caughnawagas chief Church Colonel colonists colony Comanche command Costebelle council declared Deerfield Detroit Dubuisson Dudley Dummer enemy England English expedition father fire Five Nations forest France French garrison governor hatchet houses hundred Hurons Illinois Indian allies inhabitants Iroquois Isle Royale Jesuits Journal Kennebec killed King La Ronde Lake land letter Louisiana Lovewell March Margry Massachusetts Mémoire minister mission missionary Mississippi Mississippi Company Montreal Mothe-Cadillac neighbors Nicholson Norridge Norridgewock Novembre Octobre officers Ottawas Outagamies palisades party peace Penhallow Penobscot Ponchartrain Port Royal priests prisoners promise province Quebec Rale river Ronde Denys Rouville sailed SAMUEL VETCH savages says sent settlements ships Shute Sieur soldiers squaws Subercase tion told trade treaty Treaty of Utrecht tribes Vaudreuil vessels Vetch village warriors western Williams women wrote York
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Sida 240 - God has brought you to the Chair of Government in a cloudy and tempestuous season, yet you have this for your Encouragement, that the people you Have to do with are a part of the Israel of God, and you may expect to have of the Prudence and Patience of Moses communicated to you for your Conduct. It is evident that our Almighty Saviour counselled the first planters to remove hither and Settle here, and they dutifully followed his Advice, and therefore He will never leave nor forsake them nor Theirs...
Sida 34 - A WEDDING FEAST. — A CAPTIVE BRIDEGROOM. FOR untold ages Maine had been one unbroken forest, and it Was so still. Only along the rocky seaboard or on the lower waters of one or two great rivers a few rough settlements had gnawed slight indentations into this wilderness of woods, and a little farther inland some dismal clearing around a blockhouse or stockade let in the sunlight to a soil that had lain in shadow time out of mind. This waste of savage vegetation survives, in some part, to this day,...
Sida 83 - but," he observes, "God showed his dislike of such a persecuting spirit; for the very next day the Seminary, a very famous building, was most of it burnt down, by a joiner letting a coal of fire drop among the shavings.
Sida 77 - After prayer I arose from my knees, but my feet were so tender, swollen, bruised, and full of pain, that I could scarce stand upon them without holding on the wigwam. And when the Indians said, "You must run today.
Sida 53 - Island in a few days and give up both him and Tucker on payment of a sufficient ransom. The flag of truce was respected, and Banks came back safe, bringing a hasty note to the elder Plaisted from his captive son. This note now lies before me, and it runs thus, in the dutiful formality of the olden time: — SIB, — I am in the hands of a great many Indians, with which there is six captains.
Sida 18 - HuronIroquois pattern, — those long arched structures covered with bark which Bre"beuf found by the shores of Matchedash Bay, and Jogues on the banks of the Mohawk. Besides the Indians, there was a French colony at the place, chiefly of fur-traders, lodged in log-cabins, roofed with cedar bark, and forming a street along the shore close to the palisaded villages of the Hurons and Ottawas. The fort, known as Fort Buade, stood at the head of the little bay.1 The Hurons and Ottawas were thorough savages,...
Sida 61 - Rouville and his men, savage with hunger, lay shivering under the pines till about two hours before dawn; then, leaving their packs and their snowshoes behind, they moved cautiously towards their prey. There was a crust on the snow strong enough to bear their weight, though not to prevent a rustling noise as it crunched under the feet of so many men. It is said that from time to...
Sida 268 - But soon again returned in fierce and furious mood. Shouting as in the morning, but yet not half so loud, For, as we are informed, so thick and fast they fell, Scarce twenty of their number, at night did get home well.
Sida 35 - They in turn, as they grow, interlock their boughs, and repeat in a season or two the same process of mutual suffocation. The forest is full of lean saplings dead or dying with vainly stretching towards the light. Not one infant tree in a thousand lives to maturity; yet these survivors form an innumerable host, pressed together in struggling confusion, squeezed out of symmetry and robbed of normal development, as men are said to be in the level sameness of democratic society. Seen from above, their...
Sida 307 - I have seen the garden on Dauphin Island, which had been described to me as a terrestrial paradise. I saw there three seedling pear-trees, three seedling apple-trees, a little plum-tree about three feet high, with seven bad plums on it, a vine some thirty feet long, with nine bunches of grapes, some of them withered or rotten and some partly ripe, about forty plants of French melons, and a few pumpkins.