| Samuel Johnson - 1800 - 302 páginas
...independence is depressed, their contempt of government subdued, and their reverence for their chiefs abated. Of what they had before the late conquest of their country, there remain only their language and their poverty. Their language is attacked on every side. Schools are erected, in which... | |
| Samuel Johnson, Arthur Murphy - 1806 - 360 páginas
...independence is depressed, their contempt of government subdued, and their reverence for their chiefs abated. Of what they had before the late conquest of their country, there remain only their language and their poverty. Their language is attacked on every side. Schools are erected, in which... | |
| William Fordyce Mavor - 1809 - 378 páginas
...independence is depressed, their contempt of government subdued, and their reverence for their chiefs abated. Of what they had before the late conquest of their country, there remain only their language and their property. Their language is attacked on every side. Schools are erected, in. which... | |
| Samuel Johnson, Arthur Murphy - 1810 - 424 páginas
...independence is depressed, their contempt of government subdued, and their reverence for their chiefs abated. Of what they had before the late conquest of their country, there remain only their language and their poverty. Their language is attacked on every side. Schools are erected, in which... | |
| Samuel Johnson - 1810 - 428 páginas
...independence is depressed, their contempt of government subdued, and their reverence for their chiefs abated. Of what they had before the late conquest of their country, there remain only their language and their poverty. Their language is attacked on every side. Schools are erected, in which... | |
| Samuel Johnson - 1811 - 386 páginas
...independence is depressed, their contempt of government subdued, and their reverence for their chiefs abated. Of what they had before the late conquest of their country, there remain only their language and their poverty. Their language is attacked on every side. Schools are erected, in which... | |
| Samuel Johnson - 1811 - 388 páginas
...independence is depressed, their contempt of government subdued, and their reverence for their chiefs abated. Of what they had before the late conquest of their country, there remain only their language and their poverty. Their language is attacked on every side. Schools are erected, in which... | |
| Samuel Johnson - 1816 - 432 páginas
...independence is depressed, their contempt of government subdued, and their reverence for their chiefs abated. Of what they had before the late conquest of their country, there remain only their language and their poverty. Their language is attacked on every side. Schools are erected, in which... | |
| Samuel Johnson (écrivain.) - 1816 - 218 páginas
...independence is depressed, their contempt of government subdued, and their reverence for their chiefs abated. Of what they had before the late conquest of their country, there remain only their language and their poverty. Their language is attacked on every side. Schools are erected, in which... | |
| 1816 - 658 páginas
...appearance, and a system of antiquated life: the clans re' tain little now of their original character; of what they had ' before the late conquest of their country, there remain only ' their language and their poverty.'J In order therefore to form correct ideas of this subject, we must transfer... | |
| |