| Samuel Shaw, Josiah Quincy - 1847 - 374 頁
...slaves did the captain great honor, and reflected equal credit upon his owner, who, he assured me, would rather sink the whole capital employed, than,...directly or indirectly, be concerned in so infamous a traffic. Besides the American vessel, there were eighteen others in the bay, under French, Danish,... | |
| 1857 - 802 頁
...slaves, did the captain great honor, and reflected equal credit upon his owner, who, he assured me, would rather sink the whole capital employed than...or indirectly be concerned in so infamous a trade." These views of a Massachusetts merchant and master, at a moment when the slave trade was permitted... | |
| 1857 - 802 頁
...slaves, did the captain great honor, and reflected equal credit upon his owner, who, he assured me, would rather sink the whole capital employed than...or indirectly be concerned in so infamous a trade." These views of a Massachusetts merchant and master, at a moment when the slave trade was permitted... | |
| Freeman Hunt, Thomas Prentice Kettell, William Buck Dana - 1857 - 820 頁
...slaves, did the captain great honor, and reflected equal credit upon his owner, who, he assured me, would rather sink the whole capital employed than...or indirectly be concerned in so infamous a trade." These views of a Massachusetts merchant and master, at a moment when the slave trade was permitted... | |
| Freeman Hunt - 1858 - 650 頁
...slaves, did the captain great honor, and reflected equal credit upon his owner, who, he assured me, would rather sink the whole capital employed than...or indirectly be concerned in so infamous a trade." These views of a Massachusetts merchant and master, at a moment when the slave-trade was permitted... | |
| Freeman Hunt - 1858 - 640 頁
...slaves, did the captain great honor, and reflected equal credit upon his owner, who, he assured me, would rather sink the whole capital employed than...or indirectly be concerned in so infamous a trade." These views of a Massachusetts merchant and master, at a moment when the slave-trade was permitted... | |
| Freeman Hunt - 1858 - 614 頁
...slaves, did the captain great honor, and reflected equal credit upon his owner, who, he assured me, would rather sink the whole capital employed than...or indirectly be concerned in so infamous a trade." These views of a Massachusetts merchant and master, at a moment when the slave-trade was permitted... | |
| Ralph Delahaye Paine - 1912 - 638 頁
...slaves did the captain great honor, and reflected equal credit upon his employers, who, he assured me, would rather sink the whole capital employed than...or indirectly be concerned in so infamous a trade." The Grand Turk returned by way of the West Indies where the sales of his cargo enabled her captain... | |
| Robert Ephraim Peabody - 1912 - 212 頁
...slaves did the captain great honor, and reflected equal credit upon his owner, who, he assured me, would rather sink the whole capital employed than...or indirectly be concerned in so infamous a trade." 1 Captain Ingersoll, having disposed of all his cargo except his rum, was about to sail for the Guinea... | |
| Allen Johnson - 1919 - 238 頁
...successful, both in enriching their owner and in defying the enemy. At the end of the war Elias Hasket Derby discovered that these fine ships were too large...earliest to swing at anchor off Canton. When Elias Basket Derby decided to invade this rich East India commerce, he sent his eldest son, Elias Hasket,... | |
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