| John Evans - 1819 - 444 páginas
...; and surely between those my friends of the Bay and Plymouth, I was sorely tossed up and down for FOURTEEN WEEKS, in a bitter winter season, not knowing what bread or bed did mean; beside the yearly loss of no small matter in trading with English and natives, being debarred from... | |
| James Davis Knowles - 1834 - 454 páginas
...accompanied him, though a number of persons were with him a short time afterwards. He proceeded to the south, towards the Narraganset Bay. The weather was very...the effects of his exposure to the severity of the weather.t He appears to have visited Ousamequin, the sachem of Fokanoket, who resided at Mount Hope,... | |
| 1834 - 424 páginas
...to this work. yet, unto these parts, wherein I may say that I have seen the face of God." — '• I was sorely tossed for one fourteen weeks in a bitter...season, not knowing what bread or bed did mean." And in another letter, s-till referring to the same generous friend, " It pleased the Most Hish to direct... | |
| James Davis Knowles - 1834 - 452 páginas
...while they had breath in their bodies ; and surely, between those, my friends of the Bay and Plymouth, I was sorely tossed, for one fourteen weeks, in a...winter season, not knowing what bread or bed did mean, beside the yearly loss of no small matter in my trading with English and natives, being debarred from... | |
| John Pitman - 1836 - 88 páginas
...though in winter snow which he felt yet," (thirty-five years afterwards,) and " was sorely tossed for fourteen weeks, in a bitter winter season, not knowing what bread or bed did mean." We find him, in the following spring, at Seekonk, on the eastern bank of the Pawtucket river, on land... | |
| American and Foreign Bible Society - 1838 - 1182 páginas
...the dreary wilderness. In a letter written many years afterwards, he says, " I was sorely tossed for fourteen weeks, in a bitter winter season, not knowing what bread or bed did mean"; and daring the remainder of his life he appears to have suffered from the effects of this cruel exposure.... | |
| Lorenzo Dow Johnson - 1839 - 112 páginas
...while they had breath in their bodies ; and surely, between those, my friends of the Bay and Plymouth, I was sorely tossed, for one fourteen weeks, in a...winter season, not knowing what bread or bed did mean, beside the yearly loss of no small matter in my trading with English and natives, being debarred from... | |
| 1839 - 656 páginas
...his cheerless way through an untrodden wilderness, and, in his o\vn significant and graphic words, "was sorely tossed, for one fourteen weeks, in a bitter...winter season, not knowing what bread or bed did mean," he laid the foundations of a state, holding forth the lively example of entire liberty of conscience... | |
| John Warner Barber - 1841 - 590 páginas
...Memoir of Roger Williams," a new work published in Boston, in 1834. to the south, towards the Naraganset Bay. The weather was very severe, and his sufferings...in a bitter winter season, not knowing what bread orbed did mean ;' and he added, that he still felt the effects of his exposure to the severity of the... | |
| Henry White - 1841 - 440 páginas
...Narragansett Bay, says, in a letter written thirtyfive years afterwards, " I was sorely tossed for fourteen weeks, in a bitter winter season, not knowing what bread or bed did mean." " Gov. Winthrop and some of his associates went over in February, 1633, to inspect Castle Island, in... | |
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