Life of Washington: A Biography, Personal, Military, and Political, Volumen1Virtue, 1860 |
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Página 377
... hope I may add , any fears of a change in them ; but at present I do not conceive that he is capable of bestowing that attention to the im- portant consequences of the married state , which is necessary to be given by those who are ...
... hope I may add , any fears of a change in them ; but at present I do not conceive that he is capable of bestowing that attention to the im- portant consequences of the married state , which is necessary to be given by those who are ...
Página 480
... hope of reconciliation . There is no longer any room for hope . If we wish to be free ; if we wish to preserve inviolate those inestimable privileges for which we have been so long contending ; if we mean not basely to abandon the noble ...
... hope of reconciliation . There is no longer any room for hope . If we wish to be free ; if we wish to preserve inviolate those inestimable privileges for which we have been so long contending ; if we mean not basely to abandon the noble ...
Página 720
... hope rushed forward to attack the barrier . Before Arnold reached the battery he was shot through the right leg , near the knee , with a musket - ball , which completely disabled him , and he was borne away to the general hospital . As ...
... hope rushed forward to attack the barrier . Before Arnold reached the battery he was shot through the right leg , near the knee , with a musket - ball , which completely disabled him , and he was borne away to the general hospital . As ...
Contenido
PORTRAIT OF WASHINGTON PEALES FRONTISPIECE | 54 |
NATURAL BRIDGE VIRGINIA | 56 |
A TREACHEROUS INDIAN | 88 |
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Términos y frases comunes
affairs afterward American appointed arms army Arnold arrived artillery assembly attack became Boston Braddock Britain British Bunker's hill camp Canada Captain cause chief Colonel Washington colonies colonists command commander-in-chief committee Connecticut continental army continental Congress council Crown Point defence delegates Duquesne duty enemy England English expedition Fairfax force Fort Cumberland Fort Duquesne Franklin French friends frontier Gage garrison George Governor Dinwiddie Henry honor hope house of burgesses hundred Indians inhabitants John John Adams king Lake land Lawrence letter liberty Lord Lord Loudoun Massachusetts measures ment miles military militia ministry Montgomery Montreal morning Mount Vernon officers Ohio Parliament party patriots Pennsylvania person Philadelphia proceeded province provincial Congress Quebec received regiment resolutions resolved Richard Henry Lee river Samuel Adams says Schuyler sent soldiers soon spirit thousand Ticonderoga tion town troops Virginia Williamsburg wrote York