Bulletin of the Essex Institute, 第 27-28 卷

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Essex Institute., 1897
Vol. 30 includes "The first half century of the Essex Institute," and "List of present members."
 

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第 84 頁 - Whereas Mr. Roger Williams, one of the elders of the church of Salem, hath broached and divulged divers new and dangerous opinions against the authority of magistrates, as also writ letters of defamation both of the magistrates and churches...
第 83 頁 - The ministers got together and declared any one worthy of banishment, who should obstinately assert, that " the civil magistrate might not intermeddle even to stop a church from apostasy and heresy...
第 81 頁 - We that were of the assistants, and some other gentlemen, and some of the women, and our captain, returned with them to Nahumkeck, where we supped with a good venison pasty and good beer, and at night we returned to our ship, but some of the women stayed behind. In the mean time most of our people went on shore upon the land of Cape Ann, which lay very near us, and gathered store of fine strawberries.
第 77 頁 - The sea was abundantly stored with rockweed and yellow flowers like gilly-flowers. By noon we were within 3 leagues of Capan, and as we sayled along the coasts we saw every hill and dale and every island full of gay woods and high trees.
第 84 頁 - ... retraction; it is therefore ordered, that the said Mr. Williams shall depart out of this jurisdiction within six weeks now next ensuing, which if he neglect to perform, it shall be lawful for the governor and two of the magistrates to send him to some place out of this jurisdiction, not to return any more without license from the Court.
第 19 頁 - God's worship ; it is, as far as I can gather, no other than is warranted by the evidence of truth, and the same which I have professed and maintained ever since the Lord in mercy revealed himself unto me, being far from the common report that hath been spread of you, touching that particular...
第 79 頁 - Also, mulberries, plums, raspberries, currants, chestnuts, filberts, walnuts, small-nuts, hurtleberries, and haws of white-thorn, near as good as our cherries in England, they grow in plenty here. For wood, there is no better in the world, I think, here being four sorts of oak, differing both in the leaf, timber, and color, all excellent good. There is also good ash, elm, willow, birch, beech, sassafras, juniper, cypress, cedar, spruce, pines and fir, that will yield abundance of turpentine, pitch,...
第 79 頁 - ... two kinds of flowers very sweet, which they say, are as good to make cordage or cloath as any hempe or flaxe we have.
第 76 頁 - I will not tell you that you may smell the corn fields before you see the land; neither must men think that corn doth grow naturally, (or on trees) nor will the deer come when they are called, or stand still and look on a man until he...
第 78 頁 - The fertility of the soil is to be admired at, as appeareth in the abundance of grass that groweth everywhere both very thick, very long and very high in divers places; but it groweth very wildly with a great stalk and a broad and ranker blade, because it never had been eaten with cattle, nor mowed with a scythe, and seldom trampled on by foot.

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