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George Bancroft, History of the United States from the Discovery of the American Continent, Vol. 3, 15th edition. 22 0 Browse Search
Harper's Encyclopedia of United States History (ed. Benson Lossing) 20 0 Browse Search
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Browsing named entities in George Bancroft, History of the United States from the Discovery of the American Continent, Vol. 3, 15th edition.. You can also browse the collection for Isaac Jogues or search for Isaac Jogues in all documents.

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bault was selected; and, as Hurons were his attendants, Isaac Jogues was given him as a companion. It was on the seventeeimage was in danger of captivity. Such was the fate of Isaac Jogues, who, having been one of the 1642. first to carry the ake for the shore, to find security in the thick forests. Jogues might have escaped also; but there were with him converts,f a soul? Ahasistari had gained a hiding-place: observing Jogues to be a captive, he returned to him, saying, My brother, I the assumption of the Virgin; and, as he ran the gantlet, Jogues comforted himself with a vision of the glory of the queen his master; and, summoned while reciting, alternately with Jogues, the rosary of the Virgin, a blow with the tomahawk laid him lifeless. Father Jogues had expected the same fate; but his life was spared, and his liberty enlarged. On a hill apartnquillity. Negotiations also continued. In May, 1646, Father Jogues, commissioned as an en- 1646 voy, was hospitably recei
is in the world they also ascribe to spirits, that are the dreaded authors of their woes. The evil demon of war was to be propitiated only by acts of cruelty; yet they never sacrificed their own children or their own friends. The Iroquois, when Jogues was among them, sacrificed an Algonquin woman in honor of Areskoui, their war-god, exclaiming, Areskoui, to Jogues in Creuz ins. 80<*> thee we burn this victim; feast on her flesh, and grant us new victories; and her flesh was eaten as a religioJogues in Creuz ins. 80<*> thee we burn this victim; feast on her flesh, and grant us new victories; and her flesh was eaten as a religious rite. Hennepin found a beaver robe hung on an oak, as an oblation to the spirit that dwells in the Falls of St Anthony. The guides of Joutel in the south- Joutel <*> west, on killing a buffalo, offered several slices of the meat as a sacrifice to the unknown spirit of that wil derness. As they passed the Ohio, its beautiful stream Chap. XXII.} was propitiated by gifts of tobacco and dried meat; and worship was paid to the rock just above the Missouri. Even now, in the remote west, ev
J. James I., his relations with Virginia, I. 120, 136, 145, 156, 187, 193. Grants a charter for New England, 272. His character, 291. James II. sends rebels to Virginia, II. 250. Becomes a proprietary, 313. Grants New Jersey, 315. Patron of the slave trade, 317. Arbitrary, 320. Favors William Penn, 364. His character, 407. His colonial policy, 408. Taxes colonial commerce, 410, 411, 413, 415. His career as king, 441. His flight, 446. Jamestown founded,. 125. Burned, I. 228. Jeffries, II. 250, 413. Jenkins, III. 436. Jesuits on the Kennebec, I. 27. On the Penobscot, 28. Order founded, III. 120. Extend French dominion, 121. Among the Hurons, 123 At Montreal, 127. Among the Mohawks, 133. On the Kennebec, 136. Their heroism, 141. Among the Onondagas, 143. Mission to the west, 149. On the Mississippi, 157. Law against, 193. Jogues, Father, III. 133. His martyrdom, 137. Johnson, Arabella, I. 357. Joliet, III. 155.