| Francis Parkman - 1875 - 406 oldal
...rejoiced to hear of it. I had come into the country chiefly with a view of observing the Indian character. To accomplish my purpose it was necessary to live...be chiefly a record of the progress of this design, and the unexpected impediments that opposed it. We resolved on no account to miss the rendezvous at... | |
| Francis Parkman - 1898 - 286 oldal
...rejoiced to hear of it. I had come into the country chiefly with a view of observing the Indian character. To accomplish my purpose it was necessary to live...be chiefly a record of the progress of this design, and the unexpected impediments that opposed it. We resolved on no account to miss the rendezvous at... | |
| Charles Haight Farnham - 1901 - 440 oldal
...the races of men ; the vices and the virtues that have sprung from their innate character and from their modes of life, their government, their superstitions...my purpose it was necessary to live in the midst of a village, and make myself an inmate of one of their lodges." i / The curiosity to which he alludes... | |
| Charles Haight Farnham - 1901 - 448 oldal
...superstitions and their domestic situation. To accomplish my purpose it was necessary to live in the midst of a village, and make myself an inmate of one of their lodges." 1 The curiosity to which he alludes was but a small part of his motives in making this perilous journey;... | |
| Charles Haight Farnham - 1903 - 438 oldal
...sprung from their innate character and from their modes of life, their government, their superstitious and their domestic situation. To accomplish my purpose it was necessary to live in the midst of a village, and make myself an inmate of one of their lodges." l The curiosity to which he alludes was... | |
| Henry Dwight Sedgwick - 1904 - 376 oldal
...rejoiced to hear of it. I had come into the country chiefly with a view of observing the Indian character. To accomplish my purpose it was necessary to live...and make myself an inmate of one of their lodges." The first plan had been to join Old Smoke's village, but Henry Chatillon, the guide, was very anxious... | |
| Francis Parkman - 1910 - 402 oldal
...my purpose it was necessary to live in the midst of them, and become, as it were, one of them. I 10 proposed to join a village, and make myself an inmate...be chiefly a record of the progress of this design, and the unexpected impediments that opposed it. 15 We resolved on no account to miss the rendezvous... | |
| Francis Parkman - 1918 - 428 oldal
...among the races of men; the vices and the virtues that have sprung from their innate character and from their modes of life, their government, their superstitions, and their domestic situation. To ac20 complish my purpose it was necessary to live in the midst of them, and become, as it were, one... | |
| Gregory H. Nobles - 1997 - 306 oldal
...graduate, was also going west, but with a very clear goal "of observing the Indian character," intending "to live in the midst of them, and become, as it were, one of them." The Oregon Trail [1849], his account of six months spent among Indians, trappers, and hunters, is one... | |
| Mike Flanagan - 1999 - 488 oldal
...Fenimore Cooper's Leather-Stocking Tales, Parkman was interested in portraying the real West. He wrote: "To accomplish my purpose, it was necessary to live...midst of them, and become, as it were, one of them." With his cousin, Quincy A. Shaw, Parkman left St. Louis aboard the steamboat Radnor on April 28, 1846.... | |
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