Life of George WashingtonG.P. Putnam, 1861 |
Iz vsebine knjige
Zadetki 1–5 od 100
Stran 33
... leave of school in the autumn of 1747 , and went to reside with his brother Lawrence at Mount Vernon . Here he continued his mathematical studies and his practice in surveying , disturbed at times by recurrences of his unlucky passion ...
... leave of school in the autumn of 1747 , and went to reside with his brother Lawrence at Mount Vernon . Here he continued his mathematical studies and his practice in surveying , disturbed at times by recurrences of his unlucky passion ...
Stran 56
... leaves me , how- ever , I think , like a criminal condemned , though not without hopes of reprieve . But this I am ... leaving them uncertain as to his move- ments , and at a loss how to act . At one time he talked of remaining a year at ...
... leaves me , how- ever , I think , like a criminal condemned , though not without hopes of reprieve . But this I am ... leaving them uncertain as to his move- ments , and at a loss how to act . At one time he talked of remaining a year at ...
Stran 71
... leave the regular path , and strike through the woods for Shan- nopins Town , two or three miles above the Fork of the Ohio , where he hoped to be able to cross the Allegany River on the ice . At Murdering Town he found a party of ...
... leave the regular path , and strike through the woods for Shan- nopins Town , two or three miles above the Fork of the Ohio , where he hoped to be able to cross the Allegany River on the ice . At Murdering Town he found a party of ...
Stran 72
... leave this perfidious neighborhood behind them ; but first it was necessary to blind the guide as to their intentions . He accord- ingly addressed him in a friendly tone , and adverting to the late circumstance , pretended to suppose ...
... leave this perfidious neighborhood behind them ; but first it was necessary to blind the guide as to their intentions . He accord- ingly addressed him in a friendly tone , and adverting to the late circumstance , pretended to suppose ...
Stran 83
... leave the regiment , but to be among the last men that leave the Ohio ; even if I serve as a private volunteer , which I greatly prefer to the establishment we are upon . . . . I have a constitution hardy enough to encounter and undergo ...
... leave the regiment , but to be among the last men that leave the Ohio ; even if I serve as a private volunteer , which I greatly prefer to the establishment we are upon . . . . I have a constitution hardy enough to encounter and undergo ...
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Pogosti izrazi in povedi
advance affairs aide-de-camp alarm American arms army Arnold arrived artillery attack batteries boats Boston Braddock British Burgoyne camp campaign Canada cannon Captain Clinton Colonel colonies command commander-in-chief conduct Congress Connecticut Creek Crown Point defence Delaware detachment Dinwiddie encamped enemy enemy's England expedition Fairfax fire force Fort Cumberland Fort Duquesne Fort Edward French frontier garrison Gates George George Clinton Governor Governor Dinwiddie Green Mountain Boys guard guns head-quarters Hessians Highlands Hill honor horse House of Burgesses Hudson hundred Indians ington Island Jerseys John Lake land letter Lord Lord Loudoun ment miles military militia Montgomery Mount Vernon night officers Ohio orders party passed patriot Peekskill Philadelphia Point prisoners province Putnam quarters Quebec re-enforcements received Reed regiment reply retreat river road Schuyler sent ships soldiers soon spirit thousand Ticonderoga tion tories town troops Virginia Wash Washington wounded writes York