| sir Josiah Child (bart.) - 1751 - 230 Seiten
...trairfported, to be employed upon plantations ;)and thefe, I fay, were fuch, as had there been no Englift foreign plantation in the world, could probably never have lived at home to do fervice to their country, but maf} have come to be hanged, or ftarved, or died untimely of fome of... | |
| Arthur Young - 1772 - 572 Seiten
...tranfported, to be employed upon plantations; and thefe, I fay, were fuch, as had there been no £nglifh foreign plantation in the world, could probably never have lived at home to do fervice to their country, but muft have come to be hanged or ftarved, or died untimely of fome of thofe... | |
| Charles Sumner - 1874 - 558 Seiten
...first peopled by a sort of loose, vagrant people, vicious, and destitute of means to live at home, .... such as, had there been no English foreign plantation...could probably never have lived at home to do service to their country, but must have come to be hanged or starved, or died untimely of some of those miserable... | |
| John Gorham Palfrey - 1870 - 698 Seiten
...employed upon plantations) ; and these, I eay, were such as, had there been no English foreign plantations in the world, could probably never have lived at home to do service to their country, but must have come to be hanged, or starved, or died untimely of some of those miserable... | |
| Charles Sumner - 1874 - 562 Seiten
...vicious, and destitute of means to live at home, .... such as, had there been no English for- ' eign plantation in the world, could probably never have lived at home to do service to their country, but must have come to be hanged or starved, or died untimely of some of those miserable... | |
| Charles Sumner - 1875 - 568 Seiten
...were first peopled by a sort of loose, vagrant people, vicious, and destitute of means to live at home such as, had there been no English foreign plantation...could probably never have lived at home to do service to their country, but mnst have come to be hanged or starved, or died untimely of some of those miserable... | |
| Eben Greenough Scott - 1882 - 368 Seiten
...destitute of means to live at home, gathered up about the streets ot London or other places, and who, had there been no English foreign plantation in the world, could probably never have lived at home, but must have come to be hanged, or starved, or died untimely of those miserable diseases that proceed... | |
| Judson Stuart Landon - 1889 - 796 Seiten
...destitute of means to live at home, gathered up about the streets ot London or other places, and who, had there been no English foreign plantation in the world, could probably never have lived at home, but must have come to be hanged, or starved, or died untimely of those miserable diseases that proceed... | |
| John Gorham Palfrey - 1865 - 708 Seiten
...English foreign plantations in the world, could probably never have lived at home to do service to their country, but must- have come to be hanged, or starved, or died untimely of some of those miserable diseases that proceed from want and vice ; or else have sold... | |
| Lucy Maynard Salmon - 1897 - 374 Seiten
...the social scale.1 The mother country looked with satisfaction on this method of disposing of those " such, as had there been no English foreign Plantation...those miserable Diseases, that proceed from want, and vice."2 She regarded her "plantations abroad as a good effect proceeding from many evil causes," and... | |
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