| Charles Wilkins Webber - 1855 - 574 str.
...of sieaking oppression. Hear again another story, from the same source, of the fate of a Mission. " Situated in the midst of a fertile valley, surrounded...happiness as they are adapted by nature to receive." But, with all the cloud of worldly cant with which the historians of New England love to involve this... | |
| Charles Wilkins Webber - 1855 - 600 str.
...thousand calves, manufactured three thousand barrels of wine, and harvested one hundred thousand fanegaa (two hundred and sixty-two thousand bushels) of grain...happiness as they are adapted by nature to receive." But what, in the meantime, has become of those " two hundred and sixty-two thousand bushels" of grain... | |
| Thomas William M. Marshall - 1863 - 528 str.
...Pacific, vol. ii., ch. i., p. 25. . j A Narrative of Four Voyages, ch. vi., p. 208 (1832). § P. 212. transported to and launched at San Pedro. Five thousand...are represented to have been sober and industrious, well-clothed and fed. . . . They constituted a large family, of which the padres were the social, religious,... | |
| Thomas William M. Marshall - 1864 - 522 str.
...his tribe were scattered, "without a home or protectors, and were in a miserable starving condition." transported to and launched at San Pedro. Five thousand...are represented to have been sober and industrious, wellclothed and fed. .... They constituted a large family, of which the padres were the social, religious,... | |
| 1877 - 972 str.
...Narrative," thus writes: " Five thousand Indians were at one time collected at the mission of St. Gabriel. They are represented to have been sober and industrious, well clothed and led, and seem to have experienced as high a state of happiness as they are adapted by nature to receive.... | |
| Henry Barnard - 1877 - 982 str.
...Narrative," thus writes: " Five thousand Indians were at one time collected at the mission of St. Gabriel. It is therefore proposed that they learn those things that are likely to led, and seem to have experienced as high :\ state of happiness as they are adapted by nature to receive.... | |
| William Seward Webb - 1890 - 324 str.
...time. " Five thousand Indians," he says, " were, at one time, collected at the mission of San Gabriel. They are represented to have been sober and industrious,...happiness as they are adapted by nature to receive. They began to learn some of the fundamental principles of civilized life. The institution of marriage... | |
| Zephyrin Engelhardt - 1897 - 556 str.
...harvested one hundred thousand IV.negas of grain a year. (10) The timber for a briganliue was cut, tctwctl, and fitted at the mission, and then transported to...been sober and industrious, well clothed and fed; and they teem to have experienced as high a state of happiness as they are adapted by nature to receive.... | |
| Eugene Joseph Sugranes - 1909 - 118 str.
...thousand calves, manufactured three thousand barrels of wine and harvested one hundred thousand fanegas of grain a year. "The timber for a brigantine was...are represented to have been sober and industrious, well-clothed, and fed, and they seem to have experienced as high a state of happiness as they are adapted... | |
| Nicholas Patrick Wiseman - 1860 - 644 str.
...devotedness approaching to adoration.t And, lastly, Mr. Bartlett observes : — They (the Indians) are represented to have been sober and industrious, well clothed and fed They constituted a large family, of which the Padres were the social, religious, and, we might almost... | |
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