| William Stith - 1747 - 554 páginas
...but moft of them low and uninhabited. So that Heaven and Earth feemed never to have agreed better, tq frame a Place for Man's commodious and delightful...Habitation, were it fully cultivated and inhabited by induftriou* People. THE Night of their Arrival, the Box was opened, and the Orders for Government read.... | |
| John Burk, Skelton Jones, Louis Hue Girardin - 1804 - 366 páginas
...many islands, both great and small ; some woody, but most of them low and uninhabita-- ble : So that heaven and earth seemed never to have agreed better,...fully cultivated, and inhabited by industrious people. Stitk. •* t Smith. \ Stlth's Virg. thief Apatnatica, holding in one hand his bow CHAP; and arrows,... | |
| George Bancroft - 1839 - 506 páginas
...the most pleasant. places in the —^ world." Hope revived for a season, as they advanced. 1607. " Heaven and earth seemed never to have agreed better...place for man's commodious and delightful habitation." 1 A noble river was soon entered, which was named from the monarch; and, after a search of seventeen... | |
| George Bancroft - 1841 - 368 páginas
...prerogative over the most pleasant places in the world." Hope revived for a season, as they advanced. " Heaven and earth seemed never to have agreed better...place for man's commodious and delightful habitation." A noble river was soon entered, which was named from the monarch ; and, after a search of seventeen... | |
| Daniel Kimball Whitaker, Milton Clapp, William Gilmore Simms, James Henley Thornwell - 1855 - 584 páginas
...completely fascinated, for he declared that ' heaven and earth seemed never to have 0 3 Hening, p. 181. agreed better to frame a place for man's commodious and delightful habitation.'* And Beverly, too, writing about a century after, says, ' the country is in a very happy •situation... | |
| George Bancroft - 1844 - 514 páginas
...the most pleasant places in the .— ^ world." Hope revived for a season, as they advanced. 1607 " Heaven and earth seemed never to have agreed better...frame a place for man's commodious and delightful habitation."1 A noble river was soon entered, which was named from the monarch ; and, after a search... | |
| Hugh Murray - 1844 - 408 páginas
...to them to claim the prerogative over the most pleasant places in the world. Heaven and earth seem never to have agreed better to frame a place for man's commodious and delightful habitation." They soon reached a noble river, which they named James, and after ascending and examining its shores... | |
| Charles Bricket Haddock - 1846 - 604 páginas
...their high souls are reproduced still in the country of which one of them said, " Heaven and earth seem never to have agreed better to frame a place for man's commodious and delightful habitation." Nothing is more difficult than to draw broad lines of distinction between portions of the same people.... | |
| John Frost - 1846 - 336 páginas
...to them to claim the prerogative over the most pleasant places in the world. Heaven and earth seem never to have agreed better to frame a place for man's commodious and delightful habitation." They soon reached a noble river, which they named James, and after ascending and examining its shores... | |
| Robert Sears - 1847 - 470 páginas
...to them to claim the prerogative over the most pleasant places in the world. Heaven and earth seem never to have agreed better to frame a place for man's commodious and delightful habitation." They soon-reached a noble river, which they named James, and after ascending and examining its shores... | |
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