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George Bancroft, History of the Colonization of the United States, Vol. 1, 17th edition. 12 0 Browse Search
The Daily Dispatch: April 3, 1862., [Electronic resource] 1 1 Browse Search
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c. x. XI. and XII., and d. i. l. x. c. XVI. Peter Martyr, d. IV. l. v., and d. v. l. i., and d. VII. l. IV. In Hakluyt, v. 320, 333, and 416. Gomara, Hist. Gen. de las Ind. c. XLV. Garcilaso de la Vega, Hist. de la Florida, l. i. c. III., and l. VI. c. XXII. Cardenas z Cano, Ensayo Cronologico para la Hist. Gen. de la Florida, d. i. p. 1, 2, and 5, Ed. 1723, folio. The author's true name is Andres Gonzalez de Barcia. Navarette, Colleccion, III. 50—53. Compare, also, Eden and Willes, fol. 228, 229. Purchas, i. 957. Meantime, commerce may have discovered a path to 1516. Florida; and Diego Miruelo, a careless sea-captain, sailing from Havana, is said to have approached the coast, and trafficked with the natives. He could not tell distinctly in what harbor he had anchored; he brought home specimens of gold, obtained in exchange for toys; and his report swelled the rumors, already credited, of the wealth of the country. Florida had at once obtained a governor; it no
d a regular and as yet an innocent 1553 commerce was carried on with Africa. The Viage to Guinea in 1553, in Eden and Willes, fol. 336, 337—353. The marriage 1554 July 25 of Mary with the king of Spain tended to excite the emulation which it was were en- 1561 to 1568. deavoring to penetrate into Persia by land, and enlarge their commerce with the East Eden and Willes. The Voyages of Persia, traveled by the Merchantes of London, &c. in 1561, 1567, 1568, fol. 321, and ff. by combining ths of desire, his representations found a hearing at court; and Dudley, earl of Warwick, liberally promoted his design. Willes's Essay for M. Frobisher's voyage, in Eden and Willes, fol. 230, and ff.; in Hakluyt, III. 47—52. Two small barks of twenWilles, fol. 230, and ff.; in Hakluyt, III. 47—52. Two small barks of twenty-five and of twenty tons', with a pinnace of ten tons' burden, composed the whole fleet, which was to enter gulfs that none before him had visited. As they June 8. dropped down the Thames, Queen Elizabeth waved her hand in token of favor, and, by<
was published by Robinson, who also, in the controversy on free will, as the champion of orthodoxy, began to be terrible to the Arminians, and disputed in the university with such power, that, as his friends assert, Chap. VIII.} 1617. the truth had a famous victory. The career of maritime discovery had, meantime, been pursued with intrepidity, and rewarded with success. The voyages of Gosnold, Smith, and Hudson: the enterprise of Raleigh, Delaware, and Gorges; the compilations of Eden, Willes, and Hakluyt,—had filled the commercial world with wonder; Calvinists of the French Church had sought, though vainly, to plant themselves in Brazil, in Carolina, and with De Monts, in Acadia; while weighty reasons, often and seriously discussed, inclined the Pilgrims to change their abode. They had been bred to the pursuits of husbandry, and in Holland they were compelled to learn mechanical trades; Brewster became a printer; Bradford, who had been educated as a farmer, learned the art of d
bject to parole. This is a deeply interesting subject to all of our own citizens who on parple and value their honor. Your humble servant is one of this class, and desires be thoroughly enlightened on the subject before hear required to act. In reference the terms of exchange agreed upon by Gen Cobb and Gen. Wool, as a basts of compled by the "Confederate Government" again the "United States," we all remember skulking, cowardly course of the "Lincoln Government" in the Trent affair-- Captain Willes was lauded and sustained first, and how, under the frown and me of England, that treacherous Government licked its own spittle and threw the responsiblity of the Trent affair upon Wilkes as unauthorized, when the world every reason to conclude that Capt. W acted under the strict letter of instruction. There is penfidy somewhere, we all known either in Gen. Wool, his Government, or the latter most likely. But how far will a knowledge of these fact benefit the inctividual o