The Fighting Governor: A Chronicle of FrontenacGlasgow, Brook, 1915 - 167 páginas |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-5 de 14
Página 27
... present at the great victory of St Gothard on the Raab . The regiment of Carignan - Salières was also engaged on this occasion . In the next year it came to Canada , and Lorin thinks that the association of Frontenac with the Carignan ...
... present at the great victory of St Gothard on the Raab . The regiment of Carignan - Salières was also engaged on this occasion . In the next year it came to Canada , and Lorin thinks that the association of Frontenac with the Carignan ...
Página 39
... present narrative as a bitter enemy of Frontenac , a word concerning him may fitly be written here . He was an officer of the king's army who had come to Canada with Talon . The fact that his wife was Talon's niece had put him in the ...
... present narrative as a bitter enemy of Frontenac , a word concerning him may fitly be written here . He was an officer of the king's army who had come to Canada with Talon . The fact that his wife was Talon's niece had put him in the ...
Página 43
... presents or personal attention . Each day some of the chiefs dined with the governor , who gave them the food they liked , adapted his style of speech to their ornate and metaphorical language , played with their children , and ...
... presents or personal attention . Each day some of the chiefs dined with the governor , who gave them the food they liked , adapted his style of speech to their ornate and metaphorical language , played with their children , and ...
Página 62
... royal order at Quebec to consider the rights and wrongs of the brandy question . A large majority of those present were opposed to prohibition . he felt that without brandy the work of France in 62 THE FIGHTING GOVERNOR.
... royal order at Quebec to consider the rights and wrongs of the brandy question . A large majority of those present were opposed to prohibition . he felt that without brandy the work of France in 62 THE FIGHTING GOVERNOR.
Página 64
... present day . All modern writers agree that Canada suffered grievously from these dis- putes , but a difference of opinion at once arises when an attempt is made to distribute the blame . The fact is that characters separately strong ...
... present day . All modern writers agree that Canada suffered grievously from these dis- putes , but a difference of opinion at once arises when an attempt is made to distribute the blame . The fact is that characters separately strong ...
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Términos y frases comunes
accused allies attack Barre Barre's bishop brandy Buade Canada Canadian canoes Cataraqui Château chief Church clergy Colbert colonists COMTE DE FRONTENAC coureurs de bois court defend Denon Denonville Denonville's Dongan duty edict England English colonies favour Fénelon fighting Five Nations force forest Fort Frontenac France François Hertel French French and Indians Fron Frontenac and Duchesneau Frontenac and Laval fur trade Gallican governor of Canada governor of Montreal honour hundred Hurons Illinois intendant Iroquois Jesuits king king's Lachine Lake Ontario Laval less Lhut Louis XIV Madame de Frontenac ments Meulles Michilimackinac militia Mississippi Mohawks Moyne noble Onondagas Onontio parishes peace Perrot Phips Phips's possessed priests profit quarrel Quebec raids received Récollets Richelieu royal Salle Salle's savages seigneur Senecas sent settlement soldier Sovereign Council St Lawrence St Louis stood success Sulpicians Talon tenac Three Estates tion tomahawk Tonty tribes troops Ultramontane Versailles warriors wilderness
Pasajes populares
Página 98 - I, and the warriors here present, are come to assure you that the Senecas, Cayugas, Onondagas, Oneidas and Mohawks are yet alive. I thank you in their name, for bringing back into their country the calumet which your predecessor received from their hands. It was happy for you that you left under ground that murdering hatchet that has been so often dyed in the blood of the French.
Página 124 - Majesties' subjects of New England, without provocation on their part, hath put them under the necessity of this expedition for their own security and satisfaction. And although the cruelties and barbarities used against them by the French and Indians might, upon the present opportunity, prompt unto a severe revenge...
Página 125 - Majesties' service and the subjects' security. Which, if you refuse forthwith to do, I am come provided, and am resolved, by the help of God, in whom I trust, by force of arms to revenge all wrongs and injuries offered, and bring you under subjection to the Crown of England, and, when too late, make you wish you had accepted of the favour tendered. "Your answer positive in an hour returned by your own trumpet, with the return of mine, is required upon the peril that will ensue.
Página 124 - King's and other stores, unimbezzled, with a seasonable deliver}' of all captives; together with a surrender of all your persons and estates to my dispose: upon the doing whereof, you may expect mercy from me, as a Christian, according to what shall be found for their Majesties' service and the subjects
Página 98 - I honour you, and all the warriors that accompany me do the same. Your interpreter has made an end of his discourse, and now I come to begin mine. My voice glides to your ear. Pray listen to my words.
Página 118 - To the New England of old he was the abhorred chief of Popish malignants and murdering savages. The New England of to-day will be more just to the brave defender of his country and his faith. In May, 1660, a party of French Algonquins captured a Wolf, or Mohegan, Indian, naturalized among the Iroquois, brought him to Quebec, and burned him there with their usual atrocity of torture. A modern Catholic writer says that the Jesuits could not save him; but this is not so. Their influence over...
Página 98 - I must tell you, Onnontio, I am not asleep ; my eyes are open, and the sun that vouchsafes the light gives me a clear view of a great captain at the head of a troop of soldiers who speaks as if he were asleep. He pretends that he does not approach to this lake with any other view than to smoke with the...
Página 99 - have a power to go where we please, to conduct ' who we will to the places we resort to, and to buy ' and sell where we think fit. If your Allies are...
Página 98 - This certainly was your thought ; and it could be nothing else but the curiosity of seeing a burnt or drowned country that moved you to undertake a journey hither. But now you have an opportunity of being undeceived, for I and my warlike retinue come to assure you that the Senecas, Cayugas, Onondagas, Oneidas and Mohawks are not yet destroyed.
Página 99 - Mohawks say, that when they buried the hatchet at Cataracuoy, in the presence of your predecessor, in the very centre of the fort, and planted the tree of peace in the same place, it was then agreed, that the fort should be used as a place of rendezvous for merchants, and not as a refuge for soldiers.
Referencias a este libro
The Fight for Canada: Four Centuries of Resistance to American Expansionism David Orchard Vista de fragmentos - 1993 |