A Narrative of the Indian Wars in New-England: From the First Planting Thereof in the Year 1607, to the Year 1677: Containing a Relation of the Occasions, Rise and Progress of the War with the Indians, in the Southern, Western, Eastern and Northern Parts of Said Country |
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Page 28
... late injuries and out- rages , drawn upon themselves the hatred of all the Eng lish , as well as of their own people by former wrongs , and distrusting their own ability to deal with them all at once , did at the last by all subtile ...
... late injuries and out- rages , drawn upon themselves the hatred of all the Eng lish , as well as of their own people by former wrongs , and distrusting their own ability to deal with them all at once , did at the last by all subtile ...
Page 32
... late invitation to the service the motion fetching a large compass from the Connecti- cut down to the Massachusetts ; from whom in the last place they were solicited thereunto . And for the oth- er two colonies , those of Connecticut ...
... late invitation to the service the motion fetching a large compass from the Connecti- cut down to the Massachusetts ; from whom in the last place they were solicited thereunto . And for the oth- er two colonies , those of Connecticut ...
Page 47
... late rebellion of Philip , the subject of the following discourse . Amongst the rest of the prisoners special notice was taken of the wife of a noted Indian called Mononotto , who with her children submitted herself , or by the chance ...
... late rebellion of Philip , the subject of the following discourse . Amongst the rest of the prisoners special notice was taken of the wife of a noted Indian called Mononotto , who with her children submitted herself , or by the chance ...
Page 62
... late through my indiscretion , and the naughtiness of my heart violated and broken this my coy- enant with my friends , by taking up arms , with evil in- tent against them , and that groundlessly ; I being now deeply sensible of my ...
... late through my indiscretion , and the naughtiness of my heart violated and broken this my coy- enant with my friends , by taking up arms , with evil in- tent against them , and that groundlessly ; I being now deeply sensible of my ...
Page 74
... late in the afternoon before they began to march , the central eclipse of the moon in Capricorn happened in the evening before they came up to the Neponset riv- er , about twenty miles from Boston , which occasioned them to make a halt ...
... late in the afternoon before they began to march , the central eclipse of the moon in Capricorn happened in the evening before they came up to the Neponset riv- er , about twenty miles from Boston , which occasioned them to make a halt ...
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Common terms and phrases
aforesaid afterwards amongst Arowsick assault barbarous began belonging betwixt Black Point Boston Brookfield brought burnt called canoe Capt Captain captive carried Casco Bay chief colony command Connecticut Connecticut colony Connecticut river danger dians divers eastward enemy English escaped espied fell fight fire fled forces friends Governor and Council guns Hadley hands hath horse hundred Indians inhabitants Island John Paine Kennebeck killed land late Lieut lish Major Waldern marched Massachusetts Medfield Mendham messengers Miantonimo miles mischief Mohegins morning Mount Hope Narragansets Nashaway neighbors New-England night Nipnet party pass peace Pemmaquid Pequods persons Philip Piscataqua Piscataqua river plantations Plymouth Plymouth colony Pocasset present prisoners Providence pursued rest returned back river Sachem Sagamore sent Sheepscot river shot side slain soldiers soon squaw swamp taken Taunton thereof things thither took town unto vessel wherein whereupon wigwams winter woods wounded
Popular passages
Page 100 - Our soul is escaped as a bird out of the snare of the fowlers: the snare is broken, and we are escaped.
Page i - For He established a testimony in Jacob, And appointed a law in Israel, Which He commanded our fathers, That they should make them known...
Page 161 - You are a child — you cannot understand matters of war — let your brother or your chief come — him will I answer.
Page 233 - The words of a talebearer are as wounds, and they go down into the innermost parts of the belly.
Page 66 - I think I can clearly say, that before these present troubles broke out, the English did not possess one foot of land in this colony, but what was fairly obtained by honest purchase of the Indian proprietors.
Page 60 - Alexander, with about eighty men, were newly come in from hunting, and had left their guns without doors, which Major Winslow with his small company wisely seized, and conveyed away, and then went into the wigwam, and demanded Alexander to go along with him before the Governor, at which message he was much appalled ; but being told by the undaunted messenger, that if he stirred or refused to go, he was a dead man...
Page 153 - Wisdom is better than Weapons of War "), he took a stick, and hung his hat upon it, and then by degrees gently lifted it up, till he thought it would be seen and so become a fit mark for the other that watched to take aim at him.
Page 56 - That if any of his did hurt to any of theirs, he should send the offender, that they might punish him. 3. That if...
Page 226 - WOE to thee that spoilest, and thou wast not spoiled ; And dealest treacherously, and they dealt not treacherously with thee ! When thou shalt cease to spoil, thou shalt be spoiled ; And when thou shalt make an end to deal treacherously, they shall deal treacherously with thee.
Page 82 - Sachem alive, he or they so delivering shall receive for their pains forty trucking cloth coats : in case they bring his head, they shall have twenty like good coats paid them. For every living subject of said Philip's so delivered, the deliverer shall receive two coats, and for every head...