I know anything of. 1 . The people are purer English blood; less mixed with Scotch, Irish, Dutch, French, Danish, Swedish, etc., than any other; and descended from Englishmen, too, who left Europe in purer times than the present, and less tainted with... Englishness Identified: Manners and Character 1650-1850 - Pàgina 19per Paul Langford - 2000 - 402 pàginesPrevisualització limitada - Sobre aquest llibre
| John Adams - 1841 - 334 pàgines
...other colony in America, and, indeed, of every other part of the world that I know any thing of. 1. The people are purer English blood ; less mixed with Scotch, Irish, Dutch, French, Danish, Swedish, &c., than any other ; and descended from Englishmen too, who left Europe in purer times than the present,... | |
| John Adams, Abigail Adams, Charles Francis Adams - 1875 - 498 pàgines
...other colony in America, and, indeed, of every other part of the world that I know anything of. 1. The people are purer English blood ; less mixed with...left Europe in purer times than the present, and less tamted with corruption than those they left behind them. 2. The institutions in New England for the... | |
| John Adams, Charles Francis Adams - 1875 - 474 pàgines
...other colony in America, and, indeed, of every other part of the world that I know anything of. 1. The people are purer English blood ; less mixed with...any other ; and descended from Englishmen, too, who loft Europe in purer times than the present, and less tainted with corruption than those they left... | |
| Eben Greenough Scott - 1882 - 368 pàgines
...every other part of the world," maybe reviewed with profit. These advantages are thus enumerated : " i. The people are purer English blood ; less mixed with...tainted with corruption than those they left behind them. "2. The institutions in New England for the support of religion, morals, and decency exceed any... | |
| Judson Stuart Landon - 1889 - 796 pàgines
...other part of the world," may be reviewed with profit. These advantages are thus enumerated : " i. The people are purer English blood ; less mixed with...tainted with corruption than those they left behind them. " 2. The institutions in New England for the support of religion, morals, and decency exceed... | |
| 1911 - 542 pàgines
...every other colony in America, and, indeed, of every other part of the world that I know anything of. The people are purer English blood; less mixed with...tainted with corruption than those they left behind them. This confidence at the beginning of the colonial epoch that the New Englanders were going to... | |
| Henry Belcher - 1911 - 424 pàgines
...mixed with Scotch, Irish, Dutch, French, Swedish, etc., than any other, and descended from Englishmen who left Europe in purer times than the present, and...tainted with corruption than those they left behind them, while the institutions in New England for the support of religion, morals, and decency, exceed... | |
| Albert Bushnell Hart - 1901 - 692 pàgines
...ridicule. colony in America, and, indeed, of every other part of the world that I know anything of. 1. The people are purer English blood ; less mixed with...tainted with corruption than those they left behind them. 2. The institutions in New England for the support of religion, morals, and decency exceed any... | |
| Albert Bushnell Hart, John Gould Curtis - 1898 - 684 pàgines
...ridicule. colony in America, and, indeed, of every other part of the world that I know anything of. 1. The people are purer English blood ; less mixed with...tainted with corruption than those they left behind them. 2. The institutions in New England for the support of religion, morals, and decency exceed any... | |
| William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, Sir John Murray IV, Rowland Edmund Prothero (Baron Ernle) - 1842 - 578 pàgines
...people are purer English hlood ; less mixed with Scotch, Irish, Dutch, French, Danish, Swedish, &c., than any other ; and descended from Englishmen, too,...tainted with corruption than those they left behind them. ' 2. The institutions in New England for the support of religion, morals, and decency exceed... | |
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