Works, Volumen20Putnam, 1909 |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-3 de 54
Página 86
... road for you to come and see him and his officers ; and urges you to come , assuring you that all past differ- ences ... road was clear ; but I understand it is not clear - it is foul and bloody , and the French have made it so . We have ...
... road for you to come and see him and his officers ; and urges you to come , assuring you that all past differ- ences ... road was clear ; but I understand it is not clear - it is foul and bloody , and the French have made it so . We have ...
Página 165
... road with his own men . Accordingly , he and his Virginia troops toiled forward through the narrow defiles of the mountains , working on the road as they went . Scouts were sent out in all di- rections , to prevent surprise . While on ...
... road with his own men . Accordingly , he and his Virginia troops toiled forward through the narrow defiles of the mountains , working on the road as they went . Scouts were sent out in all di- rections , to prevent surprise . While on ...
Página 331
Washington Irving. A NEW MILITARY ROAD . 331 army could reach Fort Duquesne by that route in thirty- four days , so that the whole campaign might be effected by the middle of October ; whereas the extreme labor of opening a new road ...
Washington Irving. A NEW MILITARY ROAD . 331 army could reach Fort Duquesne by that route in thirty- four days , so that the whole campaign might be effected by the middle of October ; whereas the extreme labor of opening a new road ...
Contenido
CHAPTER I | 25 |
CHAPTER II | 45 |
CHAPTER III | 53 |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras 36 secciones no mostradas
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Términos y frases comunes
affairs American appointed arms army arrived artillery Assembly attack Boston Braam Braddock British brother Bunker's Hill camp campaign Captain Colonel colonies command conduct Congress council Creek Croghan Crown Point Cumberland detachment Duquesne encamped enemy England English expedition fire force Fort Cumberland Fort Duquesne French frontier Gage garrison George George Croghan Gist Governor Dinwiddie half-king honor horses House of Burgesses Hugh Mercer hundred Indians ington John king Lake land Lawrence letter Logstown Lord Dunmore Lord Fairfax Lord Loudoun Loudoun Massachusetts ment miles military militia Montcalm Mount Vernon mountains night officers Ohio orders Parliament party patriot Pennsylvania Potomac province Putnam received redoubt regiment retreat returned river road sachem savages scouts sent ships Sir William Johnson soldiers spirit thousand tion took town traders tribes troops Virginia wagons warriors Wash Washington Wessyngton wilderness William Williamsburg Winchester wounded writes York