La SalleMacmillan, 1916 - 212 Seiten |
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Seite v
... La Salle's career , with details enough of contemporaneous history , scenery , manners , and customs to indi- cate the picturesque background against which La Salle's lonely figure moves in all the heroism of his magnificent journeys ...
... La Salle's career , with details enough of contemporaneous history , scenery , manners , and customs to indi- cate the picturesque background against which La Salle's lonely figure moves in all the heroism of his magnificent journeys ...
Seite xi
... SUCCESS AT LAST CHAPTER XIV PAGE · 153 CHAPTER XV GREATER PLANS FOR THE FUTURE · 168 CHAPTER XVI DISASTER AND DEATH CHAPTER XVII LA SALLE COMES TO HIS OWN 184 203 LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS PORTRAIT OF LA SALLE NIAGARA FALLS . CONTENTS xi.
... SUCCESS AT LAST CHAPTER XIV PAGE · 153 CHAPTER XV GREATER PLANS FOR THE FUTURE · 168 CHAPTER XVI DISASTER AND DEATH CHAPTER XVII LA SALLE COMES TO HIS OWN 184 203 LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS PORTRAIT OF LA SALLE NIAGARA FALLS . CONTENTS xi.
Seite xvii
... La Salle's career , with details enough of contemporaneous history , scenery , manners , and customs to indi- cate the picturesque background against which La Salle's lonely figure moves in all the heroism of his magnificent journeys ...
... La Salle's career , with details enough of contemporaneous history , scenery , manners , and customs to indi- cate the picturesque background against which La Salle's lonely figure moves in all the heroism of his magnificent journeys ...
Seite xix
... La Salle's party , as they blazed the trail from the Great Lakes to the waters flowing to the Gulf , and claimed all that fair , unknown country for Louis the Fourteenth ... LA SALLE CHAPTER I LA SALLE'S ADVENTURES BEGIN RENÉ ROBERT vii.
... La Salle's party , as they blazed the trail from the Great Lakes to the waters flowing to the Gulf , and claimed all that fair , unknown country for Louis the Fourteenth ... LA SALLE CHAPTER I LA SALLE'S ADVENTURES BEGIN RENÉ ROBERT vii.
Seite 1
Louise Hasbrouck Zimm. LA SALLE CHAPTER I LA SALLE'S ADVENTURES BEGIN RENÉ ROBERT CAVELIER , who afterwards took the name of La Salle from that of an estate belong- ing to his family , was born in Rouen , France , in 1643. He was the ...
Louise Hasbrouck Zimm. LA SALLE CHAPTER I LA SALLE'S ADVENTURES BEGIN RENÉ ROBERT CAVELIER , who afterwards took the name of La Salle from that of an estate belong- ing to his family , was born in Rouen , France , in 1643. He was the ...
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Aquipaguetin bark beaver began brother buffalo building cabin calumet camp Canada canoes Cavelier chief coureurs de bois Crèvecœur danger deserted Duhaut enemies expedition explorers Father Gabriel Father Hennepin Father Membré feared feast fire forests Fort Frontenac France French Frenchmen friends Frontenac fur-trade furs Galinée gave Green Bay Griffin Gulf of Mexico hundred hunting Huron Illinois village Indian corn Iroquois Jesuits Joseph River journey Joutel killed king La Salle La Salle's Lake Huron Lake Michigan Lake Ontario Lake Superior land leagues Liotot lived Louis Mackinac Mascoutens meat Miamis mission Mississippi Montreal Moranget Motte mouth Niagara Nicollet night Nika paddled Parkman party peace portage Pottawattamies present priests Quebec reached Recollet returned sail Salle Salle's savages says Hennepin seigniory sent ship shore Sioux soon Straits Sulpitians thought told Tonty Tonty's took trade tribes trip warriors winter woods
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 160 - In the name of the most high, mighty, invincible, and victorious Prince, Louis the Great, by the Grace of God King of France and of Navarre, Fourteenth of that name...
Seite 161 - Nearly the whole of that one thousand three hundred miles of old Mississippi River which La Salle floated down in his canoes, two hundred years ago, is good solid dry ground now. The river lies to the right of it, in places, and to the left of it in other places.
Seite 34 - I had escaped every peril from the Indians. I had passed forty-two rapids, and was on the point of disembarking, full of joy at the success of so long and difficult an enterprise, when my canoe capsized, after all danger seemed over. I lost two men and my box of papers within sight of the first French settlements, which I had left almost two years before.
Seite 3 - The new-comers were bedizened with a strange mixture of French and Indian finery; while some of them, with instincts more thoroughly savage, stalked about the streets as naked as a Pottawattamie or a Sioux. The clamor of tongues was prodigious, and gambling and drinking filled the day and the night. When at last they were sober again, they sought absolution for their sins; nor could the priests venture to bear too hard on their unruly penitents, lest they should break wholly with the Church and dispense...
Seite 160 - Louisiana, from the mouth of the great river St. Louis, otherwise called the Ohio, ... as also along the river Colbert, or Mississippi, and the rivers which discharge themselves thereinto, from its source beyond the country of the Nadouessioux . . . as far as its mouth at the sea, or Gulf of Mexico...
Seite 101 - Such was Cavelier de la Salle. In him, an unconquerable mind held at its service a frame of iron, and tasked it to the utmost of its endurance. The pioneer of western pioneers was no rude son of toil, but a man of thought, trained amid arts and letters.1 He had reached his goal ; but for him there was neither rest nor peace.
Seite 197 - It is easy to reckon up his defects, but it is not easy to hide from sight the Roman virtues that redeemed them. Beset by a throng of enemies, he stands, like the King of Israel, head and shoulders above them all. He was a tower of adamant, against whose impregnable front hardship and danger, the rage of man and of the elements, the southern sun, the northern blast, fatigue, famine, disease, delay, disappointment, and deferred hope emptied their quivers in vain.
Seite 32 - They glided calmly down the tranquil stream, by islands choked with trees and matted with entangling grapevines; by forests, groves, and prairies, the parks and pleasure grounds of a prodigal Nature; by thickets and marshes and broad bare sandbars; under the shadowing trees, between whose tops looked down from afar the bold brow of some woody bluff.
Seite 138 - This wily savage had the bones of some distinguished relative, which he preserved with great care in some skins dressed and adorned with several rows of black and red porcupine quills. From time to time he assembled his men to give it a smoke, and made us come several days to cover the bones with goods, and by a present wipe away the tears he had shed for him, and for his own son killed by the Miamis. To appease this captious man, we threw on the bones several fathoms of tobacco, axes, knives, beads,...
Seite 53 - The waters which fall from this horrible precipice do foam and boil after the most hideous manner imaginable, making an outrageous noise, more terrible than that of thunder ; for when the wind blows out of the south their dismal roaring may be heard more than fifteen leagues off.