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Miles Standish |
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The Pilgrims in Holland The Voyage Exploring the Coast The Landing Life on Shore The Indians Exploring Tours Menaces of Famine and War The Weymouth Colonists The Sickness of Massasoit Domestic and Foreign Policy Growth of Settlements The Courtship The Trading-post Menaced Removal to Duxbury The Standish Monument |
CAPTAIN MILES STANDISH NOW NUMBERING THOUSANDS THIS VOLUME IS RESPECTFULLY INSCRIBED WITH THE HOPE THAT NO ONE OF THEM MAY EVER DIM THE LUSTER OF THAT NAME, TO WHICH THE VIRTURES OF THEIR DISTINGUISHED ANCESTOR HAVE ATTACHED IMPERISHABLE RENOWN. JOHN S. C. ABBOT PrefaceThe adventures of our Pilgrim Fathers must ever be a theme of absorbing interest to all their descendants. Their persecutions in England, their flight to Holland, their passage across the stormy ocean, this new world, as they found it, swept by the storms of approaching winter, their struggles with the hardships of the wilderness, and conflicts with the ferocious savage,—all combine in forming a narrative replete with the elements of entertainment and instruction. Fortunately, there can be no doubt in reference to the essential facts. All these events have occurred within the last three hundred years, a period fully covered by authentic historical documents. In giving occasional extracts from these documents, I have deemed it expedient to modernize the spelling, and occasionally to exchange an unintelligible, obsolete word for one now in use. For a period of about forty years, Captain Miles Standish was intimately associated with the Pilgrims. His memory is inseparably connected with theirs. It has been a constant pleasure to the author to endeavor to rear a worthy tribute to the heroic captain and the noble man, who was one of the most illustrious of those who laid the foundations of this great Republic. Fair Haven, Connecticut.
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