Autobiographies: A Collection of the Most Instructive and Amusing Lives Ever Published, Volumen5Whittaker, Treacher, and Arnot, 1831 |
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Página 32
... leave the seaside ; and it galled us severely , to think how we were forced up the country like a flock of sheep , at the pleasure of a parcel of barbarous negroes , without any power to make terms for ourselves like men . Some cursed ...
... leave the seaside ; and it galled us severely , to think how we were forced up the country like a flock of sheep , at the pleasure of a parcel of barbarous negroes , without any power to make terms for ourselves like men . Some cursed ...
Página 33
... leaving us to march at our leisure ; having before taken care that we should not want provisions , and left his chief officer ( whom I shall call his general ) strict orders to supply us with what- ever we wanted , and what the country ...
... leaving us to march at our leisure ; having before taken care that we should not want provisions , and left his chief officer ( whom I shall call his general ) strict orders to supply us with what- ever we wanted , and what the country ...
Página 40
... leave him by the side of a pond of water ; where , as I was afterwards informed , they soon put him out of his pain , by striking their lances into several parts of his body . Having marched about two or three miles farther , we got 40 ...
... leave him by the side of a pond of water ; where , as I was afterwards informed , they soon put him out of his pain , by striking their lances into several parts of his body . Having marched about two or three miles farther , we got 40 ...
Página 43
... leave half those India goods they had brought out of the town behind them , that they might travel with less fatigue . We walked with more ease half this day than we did the day before , it proving cloudy weather and cool . About noon ...
... leave half those India goods they had brought out of the town behind them , that they might travel with less fatigue . We walked with more ease half this day than we did the day before , it proving cloudy weather and cool . About noon ...
Página 45
... leave them ; however he would engage that his own brother , who had no children , should be one of the hostages . Captain Younge , who imagined that they followed us on account of their prince only , and that if we should release him ...
... leave them ; however he would engage that his own brother , who had no children , should be one of the hostages . Captain Younge , who imagined that they followed us on account of their prince only , and that if we should release him ...
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Autobiographies: A Collection of the Most Instructive and Amusing ..., Volumen5 Vista completa - 1831 |
Términos y frases comunes
alligators amongst Antenosa Anterndroea army asked assured beef brother calabash called canoes Captain Drummond carry deaan Afferrer deaan Crindo deaan Mevarrow deaan Murnanzack deaan Sambo deaan Trongha deaan Woozington demons desired dress Drury Eglasse enemy English father faungidge favour Feraignher fire friends Frukey garevo gave give ground guinea corn hand heard honey imagine island killed king's knew lamber lance licked his feet likewise lived looked Madagascar manner marched master miles morning natives negroes never night northward obliged observed owley perceived plantations Port Dauphine prince Rer Befaugher Rer Moume Rer Vove returned river Robert Drury Ry-Nanno sent ship shore slaves soon stay tamarind tell thing Thornbury thought three or four toake told took town tree umossee walked whereupon whilst wife wild cattle wild yams wives women wood wounded