| Robert Aspland - 1845 - 878 pagine
...Cross. Many of them would have died in defence of it. Whoever has read the correspondence of Cortes, - bVD y G,ŕ Tr 8 w 6K7 ! H# 9 a V : , H q (!_ G X , ~eZ/ 2 enterprize, by the premature and most impolitic manner in which he would have forced conversion on... | |
| 1845 - 880 pagine
...it. Whoever has read the correspondence of Cortes, or, still more, has attended to the circumstance's of his career, will hardly doubt that he would have...perilled life and fortune, and the success of his whole enterprize, by the premature and most impolitic manner in which he would have forced conversion on... | |
| Martin John Spalding - 1855 - 698 pagine
...cross. Many of them would have died in defense of it. Whoever has read the correspondence of Cortes, or, still more, has attended to the circumstances...lay down his life for the faith. He more than once periled life, and fortune, and the success of his whole enterprise, by the premature and most impolitic... | |
| Martin John Spalding - 1894 - 426 pagine
...cross. Many of them would have died in defense of it. Whoever has read the correspondence of Cortes, or, still more, has attended to the circumstances...lay down his life for the faith. He more than once periled life, and fortune, and the success of his whole enterprise, by the premature and most impolitic... | |
| William Hickling Prescott - 1898 - 524 pagine
...Cross. Many of them would have died in defence of it. Whoever has read the correspondence of Cone's, or, still more, has attended to the circumstances...manner in which he would have forced conversion on the natives.86 To the more rational 84 Humboldt, KssaJ politique, tom. II, p. 267. 86 An extraordinary... | |
| William Hickling Prescott - 1902 - 238 pagine
...Cross. Many of them would have died in defense of it. Whoever has read the correspondence of Cortes, or, still more, has attended to the circumstances...lay down his life for the faith. He more than once periled life, and fortune, and the success of his whole enterprise, by the premature and most impolitic... | |
| William Hickling Prescott - 1904 - 432 pagine
...Cross. Many of them would have died in defence of it. Whoever has read the correspondence of Cortes, or, still more, has attended to the circumstances...manner in which he would have forced conversion on the natives.42 To the more rational spirit of the present day, enlightened by a purer Christianity, it... | |
| Charles Henry Robinson - 1916 - 570 pagine
...into the age — the age of the Crusades. . . . Whoever has read the correspondence of Corte's . . . will hardly doubt that he would have been among the...natives. To the more rational spirit of the present day it may seem difficult to reconcile gross deviations from morals with such devotion to the cause of... | |
| Charles Henry Robinson - 1917 - 678 pagine
...into the age — the age of the Crusades. . . . Whoever has read the correspondence of Cortes . . . will hardly doubt that he would have been among the first to lay down his life for the faith. . . . There can be no doubt that Cortes, with every other man in his army, felt he was engaged in a... | |
| Charles Henry Robinson - 1917 - 684 pagine
...into the age — the age of the Crusades. . . . Whoever has read the correspondence of Cortes . . . will hardly doubt that he would have been among the first to lay down his life for the faith. . . . There can be no doubt that Cortes, with every other man in his army, felt he was engaged in a... | |
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