Blackwood's Magazine, 215 tomas |
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The French made their first experiments on the mainland of America ; and Englishmen also , when they turned their thoughts to colonisation , fol- lowed the counsels of Ralegh , attempting Virginia and Guiana , but neglecting the ...
The French made their first experiments on the mainland of America ; and Englishmen also , when they turned their thoughts to colonisation , fol- lowed the counsels of Ralegh , attempting Virginia and Guiana , but neglecting the ...
42 psl.
His visions of the future were not re- stricted to a mere sharing of St Christopher with the French . What he looked for was a dominion covering all the Carib- bees , every fair island peopled with English planters , pouring its riches ...
His visions of the future were not re- stricted to a mere sharing of St Christopher with the French . What he looked for was a dominion covering all the Carib- bees , every fair island peopled with English planters , pouring its riches ...
44 psl.
Hitherto the Eng- lish and French had found plenty of room in St Chris- topher , but now the island was filling up , and a definite par- tition was necessary . In the summer of 1627 , after d'Es- nambuc had returned from France with a ...
Hitherto the Eng- lish and French had found plenty of room in St Chris- topher , but now the island was filling up , and a definite par- tition was necessary . In the summer of 1627 , after d'Es- nambuc had returned from France with a ...
45 psl.
Jean Baptiste du Tertre , a French priest and historian , who spent many years in the West Indies , records that every party of English emi- grants came out well supplied with equipment and foodstuffs to carry them over the period of ...
Jean Baptiste du Tertre , a French priest and historian , who spent many years in the West Indies , records that every party of English emi- grants came out well supplied with equipment and foodstuffs to carry them over the period of ...
46 psl.
One cannot imagine a Tudor sovereign placing him- self in such a position and being so entirely unconscious of his humiliation as Charles afterwards appeared to be . The Carlisle party were satis- of the French ; the remainder although ...
One cannot imagine a Tudor sovereign placing him- self in such a position and being so entirely unconscious of his humiliation as Charles afterwards appeared to be . The Carlisle party were satis- of the French ; the remainder although ...
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able appeared asked began believe better called Captain carried coming course dark door doubt English eyes face fact feel fire followed four French gave give half hand hard head heard Hilda hope horses hunting interest island Italy keep kind knew land later least leave less light live looked matter means ment miles mind morning move nature nearly never night Octavia once Ormuz party passed Persian person play poor reached remember rest river road round seemed seen ship showed side soon stand strange sure talk tell thing thought tion told took turned village wall whole young
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