The American People: A Study in National Psychology1909 |
من داخل الكتاب
الصفحة 191
... emigrants from manor and farm in Suffolk and Essex . What did they wear across seas ? What did they wear in the New World ? What they wore in England . " 1 They wore doublets and breeches of brown leather ( brown , not gray ) , buff ...
... emigrants from manor and farm in Suffolk and Essex . What did they wear across seas ? What did they wear in the New World ? What they wore in England . " 1 They wore doublets and breeches of brown leather ( brown , not gray ) , buff ...
الصفحة 197
... emigrants were outfitted in no scrimping fashion . The following is an inventory of the " apparrell for 100 men , " furnished to each member of Higginson's company in 1628 : — “ 4 peares of shoes , 4 peares of stockins , 1 peare Norwich ...
... emigrants were outfitted in no scrimping fashion . The following is an inventory of the " apparrell for 100 men , " furnished to each member of Higginson's company in 1628 : — “ 4 peares of shoes , 4 peares of stockins , 1 peare Norwich ...
الصفحة 218
... emigration to Virginia , Maryland , and the Carolinas was for the most part composed of the sons of gentry , whose ideas and habits but ill fitted them for the struggle with nature in the wilderness . Such emigrants had little ...
... emigration to Virginia , Maryland , and the Carolinas was for the most part composed of the sons of gentry , whose ideas and habits but ill fitted them for the struggle with nature in the wilderness . Such emigrants had little ...
الصفحة 229
... emigration , just as two centu- ries later they were the exciting cause to turn that human stream from Ireland to the land of hope and 1 Fiske : Old Virginia and Her Neighbours , vol . i , p . 170 . promise . The sixteenth and ...
... emigration , just as two centu- ries later they were the exciting cause to turn that human stream from Ireland to the land of hope and 1 Fiske : Old Virginia and Her Neighbours , vol . i , p . 170 . promise . The sixteenth and ...
الصفحة 230
... circumstances should be regarded with sullen resignation or keen enthusiasm . The emigrant has always been drawn from the two extremes of the moral and tempera- mental scale ; he has either been devil - loving 230 THE AMERICAN PEOPLE.
... circumstances should be regarded with sullen resignation or keen enthusiasm . The emigrant has always been drawn from the two extremes of the moral and tempera- mental scale ; he has either been devil - loving 230 THE AMERICAN PEOPLE.
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عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
adventurers Ameri American American character became become beginning believed Bible Blue Laws brought Catholic causes Cavalier CHAPTER Church of England civilization climate colonists color common Connecticut conscience constitution cracy democracy divine Dutch early emigrants English English Colonies Englishmen established Europe existence faith Fiske force freedom gave Georgia governor historian History of Maryland human impression Indians influence institutions intellectual King labor laid land later less liberal liberty lived Lord Maryland Massachusetts ment mental mind moral nation natural never North passion persecution Pilgrim plantation planted political produced proprietors Protestantism Protestants Puritan Quakers race religion religious resistance Rhode Island Roger Williams says sense servants settlement settlers seventeenth century slavery slaves social society soil South Carolina spirit struggle theocracy things tion to-day tobacco United Virginia wealth Winthrop women writers York