Yonnondio, Or Warriors of the Genesee: Tale of the Seventeenth CenturyWiley & Putnam, 1844 - 239 páginas |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-5 de 25
Página 23
... fell The monotone of evening bell . Again he tried his vaunted speed With jocund brothers , on the mead , And marked his sister , young and fair , Plait garlands for her flowing hair- Met that devoted maid once more , Who wildly wept ...
... fell The monotone of evening bell . Again he tried his vaunted speed With jocund brothers , on the mead , And marked his sister , young and fair , Plait garlands for her flowing hair- Met that devoted maid once more , Who wildly wept ...
Página 50
... fell , And when the old man dieth , No child will ring his knell . Oh , would that I had never Heard Love's beguiling lay , And fled with him in darkness 6 Who stole my heart away . ' 4 . There is a lordly castle That stands beyond the ...
... fell , And when the old man dieth , No child will ring his knell . Oh , would that I had never Heard Love's beguiling lay , And fled with him in darkness 6 Who stole my heart away . ' 4 . There is a lordly castle That stands beyond the ...
Página 71
... Amid that raging crew alone , Ill would the son of France have fared ; For daggers , wrought of flint and bone , With fell intent were round him bared , And knives , that Christian blood had shed , Described THE COTTAGE . 71.
... Amid that raging crew alone , Ill would the son of France have fared ; For daggers , wrought of flint and bone , With fell intent were round him bared , And knives , that Christian blood had shed , Described THE COTTAGE . 71.
Página 84
... slow To frantic leap and deafening yell , And on imaginary foe An hundred weapons fell , - Till , hacked and splintered to the ground , In fragments lay the post around . XIV . Wild and more wild the tumult grew , 84 YONNONDIO .
... slow To frantic leap and deafening yell , And on imaginary foe An hundred weapons fell , - Till , hacked and splintered to the ground , In fragments lay the post around . XIV . Wild and more wild the tumult grew , 84 YONNONDIO .
Página 90
... oye , Armed and impatient to destroy , Out - lying Hurons raised the yell : Wounded , the fleetest of their race I distanced in a weary chase , * The Bear . Through thicket , brake and fell . An hundred rods 90 YONNONDIO .
... oye , Armed and impatient to destroy , Out - lying Hurons raised the yell : Wounded , the fleetest of their race I distanced in a weary chase , * The Bear . Through thicket , brake and fell . An hundred rods 90 YONNONDIO .
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Yonnondio, or Warriors of the Genesee: Tale of the Seventeenth Century William Howe Cuyler Hosmer Sin vista previa disponible - 2015 |
Términos y frases comunes
Amid arms band bark battle beneath bird Blanche blood bore bosom boughs bound bower brave breast breath bright brow Canadice Canandaigua Lake Caneadea CANTO captive Charlevoix chase chief cloud Conesus Dance dark dead deep dread dream earth Edinburg enemy fear feet fierce fire Five Nations flashing fled flower forest French gazed glance gleams Grai grave green grim grove hair hand hatchet hath haunt head heard heart hill hunter Huron Indian Irondequoit Iroquois Jesuit knife lake land leafy light limbs lonely look loud maize Mary Jemison mournful nigh night Nonville o'er Old Can-ne-hoot On-yit-ha pale pirogues Portageville pride proud rill river round rude sachem savage scalp-lock scalps scene Senecas shade shore sire slain soul storm thee tide tomahawk tone tread tree tribe voice warrior wave wild Wild warriors wind wood Wun-nut-hay Yonnondio
Pasajes populares
Página 217 - Hear, Yonnondio: our women had taken their clubs, our children and old men had carried their bows and arrows into the heart of your camp, if our warriors had not disarmed them, and kept them back, when your messenger Ohgnesse came to our castles.
Página 217 - We may go where we please, and carry with us whom we please, and buy and sell what we please. If your allies be your slaves, use them as such, command them to receive no other but your people.
Página 222 - Canada sends to Onondaga, and talks to us of Peace with our whole House, but War was in his Heart, as you now see by woful Experience. He did the same formerly at Cadarackui, and in the Senekas Country.
Página 217 - 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 223 - No. 5. Containing 88 scalps of women; hair long, braided in the Indian fashion, to show they were mothers; hoops blue; skin yellow ground, with little red tadpoles, to represent, by way of triumph, the tears of grief occasioned to their relations; a black...
Página 97 - The red-breast, perched in arbor green, Sad minstrel of the quiet scene — While hymning, for the dying sun, Strains like a broken-hearted one, Raised not her mottled wing to fly As swept those silent warriors by. The wood-cock, in his moist retreat, Heard not the falling of their feet ; On his dark roost the gray owl slept ; Time with his drum the partridge kept, Nor left the deer his watering-place, So hushed, so noiseless was their pace.
Página 217 - I do not sleep; I have my eyes open, and the sun which enlightens me, discovers to me a great captain at the head of a company of soldiers who speaks as if he were dreaming.
Página 217 - Ohguesse, came to our castles It is done, and I have said it. Hear, Yonnondio, we plundered none of the French, but those that carried guns, powder, and ball to the Twightwies and Chictaghicks, because those arms might have cost us our lives.
Página 217 - You must have believed when you left Quebec, that the sun had burnt up all the forests, which render our country inaccessible to the French...
Página 229 - ... without any variation till midnight. The Indians, and some of the inhabitants of the back settlements, think if this bird perches upon any house, that it betokens some mishap to the inhabitants of it.