| John Halkett - Indians - 1825 - 426 pages
...may guess that probably the devil decoyed those miserable salvages hither, in hopes that the Gospel would never come here to destroy or disturb his absolute empire over them. But our Eliot was in such ill terms with the devil as to alarm him with sounding the silver trumpets... | |
| Samuel G. Drake - Indians of North America - 1834 - 582 pages
...of this mighty continent, yet we may guess that probably the Devil decoyed those miserable salvages hither, in hopes that the gospel of the Lord Jesus...destroy or disturb his absolute empire over them. But our Eliot was in such ill terms with the Ihril, as to alarm him with sounding the xili-ir trumpets... | |
| Jared Sparks, Edward Everett, James Russell Lowell, Henry Cabot Lodge - American fiction - 1837 - 594 pages
...of this mighty continent, yet we may guess that probably the Devil decoyed those miserable salvages hither, in hopes that the gospel of the Lord Jesus...destroy or disturb his absolute empire over them." "But our Eliot," continues he, "was on such ill terms with the Devil, as to alarm him with sounding... | |
| Samuel Gardner Drake - Indians of North America - 1837 - 642 pages
...of this mighty continent, yet we may guess that probably the Devil decoyed those miserable salvages hither, in hopes that .the gospel of the Lord Jesus...destroy or disturb his absolute empire over them. But our Eliot was in such ill terms with the Devil, as to alarm him with sounding the silver trumpets... | |
| Samuel G. Drake - Indians of North America - 1837 - 654 pages
...yet we may guess that probably the Devil decoyed those miserable salvages hither, in hopes that I IK: gospel of the Lord Jesus Christ would never come here...destroy or disturb his absolute empire over them. But our Eliot was in such ill terms with the Dit-it, as to alarm him with sounding the «ilr/-r trumpets... | |
| James Wimer - Indian captivities - 1841 - 788 pages
...of this mighty continent, yet we may guess that probably the Devil decoyed those miserable salvages hither, in hopes that the gospel of the Lord Jesus...destroy or disturb his absolute empire over them. But our Eliot was in such ill terms with the Devil, as to alarm him with sounding the silver trumpets... | |
| James Wimer - Indian captivities - 1841 - 664 pages
...yet we may guess that probably the Devil decoyed those miserable salvages hither, in hopes that thé gospel of the Lord Jesus Christ would never come here...destroy or disturb his absolute empire over them. But our Eliot was in such ill terms with the Devil, as to alarm him with sounding the silver trumpets... | |
| Henry Brown - Illinois - 1844 - 526 pages
...of this mighty Continent, yet we may guess, that probably the devil decoyed these miserable salvages hither, in hopes that the gospel of the Lord Jesus...destroy or- disturb his absolute empire over them. But our Elliot (a celebrated missionary to the Indians,) was on such ill terms with the devil, as to... | |
| Samuel Wilberforce - United States - 1844 - 484 pages
...i. 7. ' Ib. first peopled : " We may guess that probably the devil decoyed those miserable salvages hither in hopes that the Gospel of the Lord Jesus...here to destroy or disturb his absolute empire over them."1 "Tawny pagans," " rabid wolves," " grim salvages," " bloody salvages," are the usual terms... | |
| New England - 1847 - 366 pages
...here; and though we know not how these Indians first became inhabitants of this mighty continent, yet we may guess that probably the devil decoyed these...miserable savages hither, in hopes that the gospel of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ would never come here to destroy or disturb his absolute empire over... | |
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