A Philosophical and Political History of the Settlements and Trade of the Europeans in the East and West Indies. Translated from the French of the Abbé Raynal, by J. Justamond, ...T. Cadell, 1777 |
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Page 27
... must not , faid he to them , expect any happiness fo long as the god of the Spaniards remains among us . He is no less our enemy than they . They feek for him in every place ; and where they find him , there they establish themselves ...
... must not , faid he to them , expect any happiness fo long as the god of the Spaniards remains among us . He is no less our enemy than they . They feek for him in every place ; and where they find him , there they establish themselves ...
Page 32
... must be further obferved , that the peo- ple are lefs mixed , their drefs more decent , and their manners better regulated , than in the other iflands . THE ftate of the colony would be still more flourishing , if its productions had ...
... must be further obferved , that the peo- ple are lefs mixed , their drefs more decent , and their manners better regulated , than in the other iflands . THE ftate of the colony would be still more flourishing , if its productions had ...
Page 34
... must be directed either to the right or left of the port , against the town or the Moro . If the latter , they may eafily land within a league of the fort , 5 * and XII . and will come within fight of it , 34 HISTORY OF SETTLEMENTS AND ...
... must be directed either to the right or left of the port , against the town or the Moro . If the latter , they may eafily land within a league of the fort , 5 * and XII . and will come within fight of it , 34 HISTORY OF SETTLEMENTS AND ...
Page 35
... must choose is mortal . To fetch fuch as is drink- able , they must go in boats to the diftance of three leagues , and it will be neceffary to fend a confider- able force for this purpose to the only river where it is to be had , or to ...
... must choose is mortal . To fetch fuch as is drink- able , they must go in boats to the diftance of three leagues , and it will be neceffary to fend a confider- able force for this purpose to the only river where it is to be had , or to ...
Page 36
... must next Speak XII . Speak of those which must be encountered on 36 HISTORY OF SETTLEMENTS AND TRADE.
... must next Speak XII . Speak of those which must be encountered on 36 HISTORY OF SETTLEMENTS AND TRADE.
Common terms and phrases
advantage affiftance againſt almoſt America becauſe BOOK Caribs cauſe coaft cocoa coloniſts colony commodities confequence confiderable confifted conqueft cultivation defire deftroyed diſtance Domingo Dutch enemy English eſtabliſhed Europe expence fafe fame favages fecure feems fent ferved fettle fettlements feven feveral fhips fhould fide fince firft firſt fituation flaves flouriſhing fmall fociety foil fome foon fpirit France French ftate ftill fubfiftence fubject fuccefs fuch fuffered fufficient fugar fuperiority fupply fupport harbour himſelf hundred increaſe induſtry inhabitants intereft interfected Iroquois iſland itſelf Jamaica labour laft land leaft leagues leaſt lefs livres loft Martinico meaſures ment moft moſt mother-country muft muſt nations nature neceffary neceffity negroes never occafioned perfons plantations planters poffeffion Port-au-Prince prefent preferved produce profperity progrefs provifions purchaſe raiſed reafon river ſhips ſmall Spaniards ſtate ſtill Surinam thefe themſelves theſe thofe thoſe thouſand tion trade uſeful veffels weft whofe
Popular passages
Page 63 - This machine is provided with four pieces of tin fixed upon an axle, which is turned by a (lave with confiderable force ; and the wind that is made by the motion of thefe plates clears the coffee of all the pellicles that are mixed with it. It is afterwards put upon a table, where the broken berries, and any filth that may remain among them, are feparated by negroes, after which the coffee is fit for fale.
Page 30 - The incredible fruitfulnefs of its new lands, if properly managed, would enable it to furpafs every other nation, however they may have got the ftart of it; their labour of more than half a century, fpent in bringing their works to perfection, would end in this, that a rival, by taking up their method, would outftrip them, and in lefs than twenty years engrofs the whole of their profits.
Page 32 - IF any thing could fupply the want of an open trade, and atone for the grievances occafioned by this monopoly at Cuba, it would be the advantage...
Page 22 - ... clothes of their neighbours the French in return for their cattle, and the money fent to them for the maintenance of two hundred foldiers, the prieib, and the government.
Page 497 - Rivieres at oa- the diftance of twenty-five leagues from the capital and higher up, became a fecond mart. In procefs of time all the fur trade centered in Montreal. The fkins were brought thither on canoes made of the bark of trees in the month of June. The number of Indians who reforted to that place increafed, as the fame of the French fpread further. The account of the reception they had met with, the fight of the things they had received in exchange for their goods, every thing contributed to...
Page 18 - ... with the inhabitants of the country, whom they obliged to dig it out of the bowels of the earth ; and the fource of it was entirely dried up, when the neighbouring iflands no longer fupplied the lofs of thofe wretched victims to the avarice of the conqueror.
Page 339 - ... was fuffered to grow more than four feet high, the crop would not be the greater, nor the fruit fo eafily gathered. The fame method is purfued for three years ; for fo long the fhrub may continue, if it cannot conveniently be renewed oftener with the profpeft of an advantage that will compenfate the trouble.
Page 32 - Spanifli veflels that fail to the new world ; this practice commenced almoft with the colony itfelf. Ponce de Leon having made an attempt upon Florida in 1512, became acquainted with the new canal of Bahama; it was immediately...
Page 154 - The woods with which it is covered, continually attract the clouds, which occasion noxious damps, and contribute to make it horrid and inaccessible, while the two others are in most parts cultivated. From these mountains, but chiefly from the first, issue many springs that water the island.
Page 182 - ... falubrious water. Such is that part of the ifland properly called Guadalupe. That which is commonly called Grand Terre, has not been fo much favoured by nature. It is, indeed, lefs rugged ; but it wants fprings and rivers. The foil is not fo fertile, or the climate fo wholefome or fo pleafant. No European...