Collections of the Massachusetts Historical SocietyMassachusetts Historical Society., 1925 For the statement above quoted, also for full bibliographical information regarding this publication, and for the contents of the volumes [1st ser.] v. 1- 7th series, v. 5, cf. Griffin, Bibl. of Amer. hist. society. 2d edition, 1907, p. 346-360. |
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Página 40
... recounting to our Children the Toils and Dangers we have encounter'd for their Benefit is the Wish of Your Friend and very humble Servant , JOHN ADAMS SAMUEL ADAMS TO JAMES Warren MY DEAR SIR , - 40 [ 1778 Warren - Adams Letters.
... recounting to our Children the Toils and Dangers we have encounter'd for their Benefit is the Wish of Your Friend and very humble Servant , JOHN ADAMS SAMUEL ADAMS TO JAMES Warren MY DEAR SIR , - 40 [ 1778 Warren - Adams Letters.
Página 57
... Servant , 1 1 MARCIA WARREN SAMUEL ADAMS TO JAMES WARREN PHILADELPHIA , Oct. 20th , 1778 2 MY DEAR SIR : I am much pleasd with the Respect lately shown to the Count D'Estaing and his Officers , but not with the Etiquet of your publick ...
... Servant , 1 1 MARCIA WARREN SAMUEL ADAMS TO JAMES WARREN PHILADELPHIA , Oct. 20th , 1778 2 MY DEAR SIR : I am much pleasd with the Respect lately shown to the Count D'Estaing and his Officers , but not with the Etiquet of your publick ...
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... Servant and any kind of Elegancies , has , while Board was fifteen dollars per week and under , cost me about 500 dollars more than my pay . it is now twenty dollars per week , hay 30 / per hundred . this Expense with the Neglect of my ...
... Servant and any kind of Elegancies , has , while Board was fifteen dollars per week and under , cost me about 500 dollars more than my pay . it is now twenty dollars per week , hay 30 / per hundred . this Expense with the Neglect of my ...
Página 82
... Servant 1 MARCIA WARREN JAMES WARREN TO SAMUEL ADAMS 2 BOSTON , Decr . 16th , 1778 MY DEAR SIR , -I am at the Close of a very Busy Day to tell you that all things here remain much in the Situation they were , no new thing haveing lately ...
... Servant 1 MARCIA WARREN JAMES WARREN TO SAMUEL ADAMS 2 BOSTON , Decr . 16th , 1778 MY DEAR SIR , -I am at the Close of a very Busy Day to tell you that all things here remain much in the Situation they were , no new thing haveing lately ...
Página 94
... Servant , RICHARD HENRY LEE MERCY WARREN TO ABIGAIL ADAMS ADAMS MSS . PLIMOUTH , March 19 , 1779 If anything would awake the sleeping Muses or call back the Wandering Deities the Imagery of this Delightful Morn when the hand of Nature ...
... Servant , RICHARD HENRY LEE MERCY WARREN TO ABIGAIL ADAMS ADAMS MSS . PLIMOUTH , March 19 , 1779 If anything would awake the sleeping Muses or call back the Wandering Deities the Imagery of this Delightful Morn when the hand of Nature ...
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Términos y frases comunes
ABIGAIL ADAMS ADAMS ADAMS MSS ADAMS TO JAMES ADAMS TO MERCY Affairs agreable America appointed Army ARTHUR LEE believe BENJAMIN LINCOLN Boston Braintree Britain British Business Capt CATHERINE MACAULAY Character Conduct Congress Continental Congress Country Court Dear Madam DEAR SIR Decr ELBRIDGE GERRY Enemy England Esteem Europe expect Family favour France Franklin French Friend and Humble Friendship frigate Genl Gentleman Gerry give Government happy hear HENRY KNOX Honour hope humble Servant JAMES LOVELL JAMES WARREN JAMES Warren YORK JAMES WINTHROP JOHN ADAMS ADAMS Lady late Letter manner MERCY WARREN Minister Money Nation Navy Board never obliged opinion Patriotism Peace pleasure PLIMOUTH political present principles received regard respect Samuel Adams Papers sentiments Ships shoud signature sincerely soon Spirit suppose thing tion Town Treaty Virtue WARREN PHILADELPHIA WARREN TO JOHN WARREN TO SAMUEL wish write York Public Library
Pasajes populares
Página 410 - O unexpected stroke, worse than of death ! Must I thus leave thee, Paradise? thus leave Thee, native soil, these happy walks and shades, Fit haunt of gods? where I had hope to spend, Quiet though sad, the respite of that day That must be mortal to us both.
Página 410 - With what to sight or smell was sweet, from thee How shall I part, and whither wander down Into a lower world, to this obscure And wild ? how shall we breathe in other air Less pure, accustom'd to immortal fruits?
Página 411 - Thus we began our pilgrimage, alternately walking and riding, the roads filled with frightened women and children, some in carts with their tattered furniture, others on foot fleeing into the woods.
Página 74 - America will both have Reason to repent it. He is not only so indolent that Business will be neglected, but you know that, although he has as determined a soul as any man, yet it is his constant Policy never to say ' yes ' or ' no ' decidedly but when he cannot avoid it.
Página 99 - Shall a few designing men, for their own aggrandizement, and to gratify their own avarice, overset the goodly fabric we have been rearing at the expense of so much time, blood, and treasure ? and shall we, at last, become the victims of our own abominable lust of gain ? Forbid it, Heaven...
Página 67 - I find in a state of confusion and darkness that surprises me. Prodigious sums of money have been expended, and large sums are yet due ; but there are no books of account, nor any documents from whence I have been able to learn what the United States have received as an equivalent.
Página 74 - I know also, and it is necessary that you should be informed, that he is overwhelmed with a correspondence from all quarters, most of them upon trifling subjects and in a more trifling style, with unmeaning visits from Multitudes of People, chiefly from the Vanity of having it to say that they have seen him. There is another thing which I am obliged to mention. There are so many private families, Ladies, and gentlemen that he visits so often, — and they are so fond of him, that he cannot well avoid...
Página 451 - Great numbers of women, who seemed to be the beasts of burden, having bushel baskets on their backs, by which they were bent double. The contents seemed to be pots and kettles, various sorts of furniture, children peeping through gridirons and other utensils. Some very young infants, who were born on the road ; the women barefooted, clothed in dirty rags.
Página 6 - The General is in camp in what is called the great valley on the Banks of the Schuylkill. Officers and men are chiefly in Hutts, which they say is tolerably comfortable; the army are as healthy as can well be expected in general. The General's apartment is very small ; he has had a log cabin built to dine in, which has made our quarter much more tolerable than they were at first.
Página 40 - I shall live and die. Is Great Britain to be annihilated ? No such thing. A revolution in her government may possibly take place, but whether in favor of despotism or republicanism is the question. The scarcity of virtue, and even the semblance of it, seems an invincible obstacle to the latter, but the annihilation of a nation never takes place. It depends wholly on herself to determine whether she shall sink down into the rank of the middling powers of Europe, or whether she shall maintain the second...