| Richard Biddle - 1831 - 344 páginas
...of that kind of fish which the savages call tiar.i-ulaon. In the same island also there breed hauks, but they are so black that they are very like to ravens,...very flattering terms, and its colonization earnestly recommended. At p. 153, we hear of Newfoundland — " There is nothing which our East and Northerly... | |
| Richard Biddle - 1831 - 366 páginas
...abundance of that kind of fish which the savages call baccalaos. In the same island also there breed hauks, but they are so black that they are very like to ravens,...very flattering terms, and its colonization earnestly recommended. At p. 153, we hear of Newfoundland — "There is nothing which our East and Northerly... | |
| John Joseph Shillinglaw - 1850 - 380 páginas
...of that kind of fish which the savages call baccalaos. In the same island also, there breed hauks, but they are so black that they are very like to ravens,...partridges and eagles, which are in like sort blacke." Cabot appears to have returned to England immediately after his discovery, as we find in the account... | |
| John Joseph Shillinglaw - 1851 - 402 páginas
...of that kind of fish which the savages call baccalaos. In the same island also, there breed hauks, but they are so black that they are very like to ravens,...partridges and eagles, which are in like sort blacke." Cabot appears to have returned to England immediately after his discovery, as we find in the account... | |
| Philip George and son, ltd - 1885 - 274 páginas
...salmons ; there are soles, also, above a yard in length. In the same island, also, there breed hawks, but they are so black that they are very like to ravens,...their partridges and eagles, which are in like sort black." Such is old Hakluyt's quaint translation of the Latin inscription on a map engraved under Sebastian... | |
| United Colonies of New England - 1893 - 160 páginas
...Baccalaos. In the Island also there breed hawks, but they are so blacke, that they are very like to rauens, as also their partridges, and eagles, which are in like sort blacke. — Hakluyt, Principall Navigations, ed. 1 589, p. 5 1 1 . ^ VIII. ANOTHER TESTIMONIE or THE VOYAGE... | |
| Albert Bushnell Hart, Edward Channing - 1893 - 28 páginas
...Baccalaos. In the Island also there breed hawks, but they are so blacke, that they are very like to rauens, as also their partridges, and eagles, which are in like sort blacke. — Hakluyt, Principall Navigations, ed. 1589, p. 511. VIII. ANOTHER TESTIMONIE OF THE VOYAGE OF SEBASTIAN... | |
| James Alexander Williamson - 1913 - 512 páginas
...which the savages call baccalaos. In the same Island also there breed hauks, but they are so blacke that they are very like to ravens, as also their partridges, and egles, which are in like sorte blacke.' The two Letters Patent granted by Henry VII afford some information... | |
| Royal Society of Canada - 1895 - 796 páginas
...which the savages call Bacalaos. In the same island ¡ilso there breed hauks, but they are eo blacke that they are very like to ravens, as also their partridges and cgles, which are in like sort blacke. The phrases on the Adams'8 map " because as I suppose " and "... | |
| William Lonsdale Watkinson, William Theophilus Davison - 1877 - 544 páginas
...abundance of that kind of fish which the savages call baccalaos. In the same island also, they breed hauks, but they are so black that they are very like to ravens,...partridges and eagles, which are in like sort blacke." For the discovery of this hitherto unknown land, viz., a part of the North American continent, the... | |
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