Philip Freneau The Poet of the Revolution: A History of His Life and Times1901 |
Iz vsebine knjige
Zadetki 1–5 od 36
Stran viii
... received has emanated from the same sources as my own ; namely , the relatives of the subject of this work , and likewise of the author . An author1 has deplored the fact that there are hundreds of names of men who have rendered the ...
... received has emanated from the same sources as my own ; namely , the relatives of the subject of this work , and likewise of the author . An author1 has deplored the fact that there are hundreds of names of men who have rendered the ...
Stran 7
... received congratulations because this emigration freed his kingdom from rebellious subjects whose loss would soon be made good . - The greatest misfortune would seem to lie in the fact of a mother country so treating her children as to ...
... received congratulations because this emigration freed his kingdom from rebellious subjects whose loss would soon be made good . - The greatest misfortune would seem to lie in the fact of a mother country so treating her children as to ...
Stran 8
... received from the country as well as the church made such a step a duty for them ; but others , so long as they were not obliged to re- nounce it , clung to the form of religion in use in their native land . Those that intended to make ...
... received from the country as well as the church made such a step a duty for them ; but others , so long as they were not obliged to re- nounce it , clung to the form of religion in use in their native land . Those that intended to make ...
Stran 9
... receiving the refugees . Massachusetts and South Carolina had agents in England to make proposals to them . Wil ... received commun- ion , and another promising they would take the oath of allegiance and supremacy within a year . In ...
... receiving the refugees . Massachusetts and South Carolina had agents in England to make proposals to them . Wil ... received commun- ion , and another promising they would take the oath of allegiance and supremacy within a year . In ...
Stran 15
... received it by hand in the former case , and in the lat- ter contingency by word of mouth . If , perchance , there should be an unclaimed missive it was left in the care of some responsible person until an owner was found to claim it ...
... received it by hand in the former case , and in the lat- ter contingency by word of mouth . If , perchance , there should be an unclaimed missive it was left in the care of some responsible person until an owner was found to claim it ...
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Aaron Burr afterwards Agnes Allaire American amongst André Fresneau appointed arms army Aurora beautiful Bellemont Biddle Blatchford British brother Captain cause Charles Cotesworth Pinckney Charleston College colony command Congress daughter death Delancey Dutch Edict of Nantes eldest England English Etienne Delancey father former France French Church Governor hands honor Huguenots Jefferson Jersey John John Morin Scott Kearny La Rochelle land Leadbeater Ledyard letter liberty lived Long Island Louis Madison marriage married minister Monmouth Monmouth County Morin Scott mother Mount Pleasant Nassau Hall National Gazette neau never o'er O'Rielly paper party patriots person Philadelphia Philip Freneau Philip Kearny Philip Morin Freneau Pierre poem poet poetry political President prison qu'il refugees remained Revolution Rochelle sails satires ship shores Street Thomas thou tion took town United verse vessels Washington wrote York