Life of George Washington, Količina 1G. P. Putnam, 1897 |
Iz vsebine knjige
Zadetki 1–5 od 62
Stran 30
... never took more than one sleep , say- ing it was unbecoming a man to turn from one side to another in bed . He was perpetually , when within his dio- cese , either riding from one manor to another , or hunting and hawking . Twice he ...
... never took more than one sleep , say- ing it was unbecoming a man to turn from one side to another in bed . He was perpetually , when within his dio- cese , either riding from one manor to another , or hunting and hawking . Twice he ...
Stran 46
... never gave him undue preference , and the im- plicit deference exacted from him in childhood continued to be habitually observed by him to the day of her death . He inherited from her a high temper and a spirit of command , but her ...
... never gave him undue preference , and the im- plicit deference exacted from him in childhood continued to be habitually observed by him to the day of her death . He inherited from her a high temper and a spirit of command , but her ...
Stran 47
... never attempted the learned languages , nor manifested any inclination for rhet- oric or belles - lettres . His object , or the object of his friends , seems to have been confined to fitting him for ordinary busi- ness . His manuscript ...
... never attempted the learned languages , nor manifested any inclination for rhet- oric or belles - lettres . His object , or the object of his friends , seems to have been confined to fitting him for ordinary busi- ness . His manuscript ...
Stran 48
... never reversed . As he had formerly been mili- tary chieftain , he was now legislator of the school ; thus displaying in boyhood a type of the future man . CHAPTER THREE - Paternal Conduct of an Elder Brother - The Fairfax Family ...
... never reversed . As he had formerly been mili- tary chieftain , he was now legislator of the school ; thus displaying in boyhood a type of the future man . CHAPTER THREE - Paternal Conduct of an Elder Brother - The Fairfax Family ...
Stran 53
... never told his love ; but , as we have already surmised , was prevented by his bashfulness . " Ah , woe is me , that I should love conceal ; Long have I wished and never dare reveal . ' 99 It is difficult to reconcile one's self to the ...
... never told his love ; but , as we have already surmised , was prevented by his bashfulness . " Ah , woe is me , that I should love conceal ; Long have I wished and never dare reveal . ' 99 It is difficult to reconcile one's self to the ...
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affairs American arms army Arnold arrived artillery attack Boston Braam Braddock British brother Bunker's Hill camp campaign Canada Canadians Captain CHAPTER Colonel colonies command commander-in-chief conduct Congress Connecticut council Creek Croghan Crown Point detachment Duquesne encamped enemy England English Ethan Allen expedition fire force Fort Cumberland Fort Duquesne French friends frontier Gage garrison George George Croghan Gist Governor Dinwiddie Green Mountain Boys half-king honor horses House of Burgesses hundred Indians ington king Lake land Lawrence letter Logstown Lord Loudoun Massachusetts ment miles military militia Montreal Mount Vernon night officers Ohio Parliament party patriot Pennsylvania present prisoners province Putnam Quebec re-enforcements received redoubt regiment reply retreat returned river sachem savages Schuyler sent Seth Warner ships Sir William Johnson soldiers spirit thousand Ticonderoga tion town tribes troops Virginia warriors Wash Washington wilderness William Winchester wounded writes York