What Cheer, Or, Roger Williams in Banishment: A PoemPreston & Rounds, 1896 - 225 oldal |
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1 - 5 találat összesen 57 találatból.
. oldal
... friends of the Bay and Plimouth , I was sorely tost for fourteen weeks , in a bitter cold winter season , not knowing what bed or bread did meane . " — Roger Williams's Letter to Mason . REVISED AND EDITED BY THOMAS DURFEE PROVIDENCE ...
... friends of the Bay and Plimouth , I was sorely tost for fourteen weeks , in a bitter cold winter season , not knowing what bed or bread did meane . " — Roger Williams's Letter to Mason . REVISED AND EDITED BY THOMAS DURFEE PROVIDENCE ...
. oldal
... friend , - His glowing soul embraced the human kind , — He toiled and suffered for earth's farthest end . Touched by the truths of his unyielding mind , The human soul did her long bondage rend ; Stern Persecution paused - blushed ...
... friend , - His glowing soul embraced the human kind , — He toiled and suffered for earth's farthest end . Touched by the truths of his unyielding mind , The human soul did her long bondage rend ; Stern Persecution paused - blushed ...
5. oldal
... friend , " still as he paced the floor , Sire Williams cried , " a friend in my sore need , To help me now some hidden way explore , By which my glorious purpose may succeed ; But closed to - night is every cottage door ; Yet there is ...
... friend , " still as he paced the floor , Sire Williams cried , " a friend in my sore need , To help me now some hidden way explore , By which my glorious purpose may succeed ; But closed to - night is every cottage door ; Yet there is ...
10. oldal
... friends might plead , and bigotry relent . XXXIV . Then he to Heaven his weeping spouse commends , And craves its blessing on his purpose bold ; Still Salem lies in sleep , and forth he wends - To breast the driving storm and chilling ...
... friends might plead , and bigotry relent . XXXIV . Then he to Heaven his weeping spouse commends , And craves its blessing on his purpose bold ; Still Salem lies in sleep , and forth he wends - To breast the driving storm and chilling ...
17. oldal
... friendship to a wandering man , " Let not , " he said , " my brother quake with fear , ' Twas Waban's cry at which the monsters ran . ” Williams received the pledge of faith sincere ; Yet warily his guest began to scan . Tall did his ...
... friendship to a wandering man , " Let not , " he said , " my brother quake with fear , ' Twas Waban's cry at which the monsters ran . ” Williams received the pledge of faith sincere ; Yet warily his guest began to scan . Tall did his ...
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Gyakori szavak és kifejezések
Aquidnay arms Awanux battle beneath blaze blood boscage bosom boughs brave breast bright broke brother calumet Canonicus CANTO Cawtantowit cheer Chepian chief Church conscience Coweset cried dark deep dread drear e'en earth eyes father fear fierce fire forest Founder friends gave glade glance gloom grim hand hatchet Haup Haup's hear Heaven hues Indian Keenomps kindling land light lone maize Manittoo marge Massasoit Miantonomi Mooshausick morn murmurs Narraganset ne'er night numbers o'er pale-faced pass paused Pawtucket Falls peace Pequot persecution pipe Plymouth Plymouth patent Pocasset Pokanoket river rolling rose round rude Sachem Sagamore Salem sate savage says Seekonk's seemed shade shelter shore Sire Williams snow soul Sowams spake Spirit STANZA stood storm strange tempest thee thickets thine thou thought throng thunders thy serpent toils tow'rd tribes Twas vale Waban Wampanoag wampum warriors Whatcheer Whilst whip-poor-will wigwam wild wood XLVII XXXIII yell Yengees
Népszerű szakaszok
208. oldal - Let men of God in courts and churches watch O'er such as do a toleration hatch ; Lest that ill egg bring forth a cockatrice, To poison all with heresy and vice.
212. oldal - Dexter and others, as our town book declares ; and whereas, by God's merciful assistance, I was the procurer of the purchase, not by monies nor payment, the natives being so shy and jealous, that monies could not do it, but by that language, acquaintance, and favor with the natives and other advantages which it pleased God to give me...
207. oldal - Plymouth, professing his own and others' love and respect to me, yet lovingly advising me, since I was fallen into the edge of their bounds, and they were loth to displease the Bay, to remove but to the other side of the water, and then, he said, I had the country free before me, and might be as free as themselves, and we should be loving neighbors together.
176. oldal - England, while they lived there ; and, besides, had declared his opinion, that the magistrate might not punish the breach of the Sabbath, nor any other offence, as it was a breach of the first table...
188. oldal - We cannot yet conceive, (they continue,) but that he is willing to have peace with us ; for they have seen our people sometimes alone two or three in the woods at work and fowling, when as they offered them no harm, as they might easily have done...
176. oldal - That whereas Mr. Williams had refused to join with the congregation at Boston, because they would not make a public declaration of their repentance for having communion with the churches of England, while they lived there...
190. oldal - By this time the enemy perceived that they were waylaid on the east side of the swamp, and tacked short about One of the enemy, who seemed to be a great, surly old fellow, hallooed with a loud voice, and often called out,
178. oldal - ... and when some of them ignored him he excommunicated them. This was too much, even for Salem, and it turned against the minister, who felt impelled to resign. He was now summoned before the general court, and refusing to recant he was ordered into exile in October, 1635. As winter was approaching, he was permitted to remain until spring on condition that he did not preach his tenets. He seems to have made no promise in the matter, but when it was known in January that he was instructing a group...
13. oldal - Vast mantle hoar. And he began to hear, At times, the fox's bark, and the fierce howl Of wolf, sometimes afar — sometimes so near, That in the very glen they seemed to prowl Where now he, wearied, paused — and then his ear Started to note some shaggy monster's growl, That from his snow-clad, rocky den did peer, Shrunk with gaunt famine in that tempest drear, XLV.
198. oldal - Governor, with the advice of others, sent them a round answer, that if they had rather have war, than peace, they might begin when they would; they had done them no wrong, neither did they fear them, or should they find them unprovided. And by another messenger sent the snakeskin back with bullets in it, but they would not receive it but sent it back again.