Great Sea Stories: Second SeriesJoseph Lewis French Brentano's, 1925 - 348 sider |
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Side 13
... thought it most expedient either to drive the Spanish Fleet from that place , or at leastwise to give them the en- counter : and for that cause ( according to her Majesties prescription ) he tooke forthwith eight of his worst and basest ...
... thought it most expedient either to drive the Spanish Fleet from that place , or at leastwise to give them the en- counter : and for that cause ( according to her Majesties prescription ) he tooke forthwith eight of his worst and basest ...
Side 16
... thought it convenient not to pursue the Spaniards any longer , because they had many great vantages of the English , namely for the extraordinary bignesse of their ships , and also for that they were so neerely conjoyned , and kept ...
... thought it convenient not to pursue the Spaniards any longer , because they had many great vantages of the English , namely for the extraordinary bignesse of their ships , and also for that they were so neerely conjoyned , and kept ...
Side 19
... thought they had set saile for Scotland . And albeit he followed them very neere , yet did he not assault them any more , for want of Powder and Bullets . But upon the fourth of August , the winde arising , when as the Spaniards had ...
... thought they had set saile for Scotland . And albeit he followed them very neere , yet did he not assault them any more , for want of Powder and Bullets . But upon the fourth of August , the winde arising , when as the Spaniards had ...
Side 20
... thought it best to leave them unto those boisterous and uncouth Northren Seas , and not there to hunt after them . The Spaniards seeing now that they wanted foure or five thousand of their people , and having divers maimed and sicke ...
... thought it best to leave them unto those boisterous and uncouth Northren Seas , and not there to hunt after them . The Spaniards seeing now that they wanted foure or five thousand of their people , and having divers maimed and sicke ...
Side 28
... thought to have carryed her alive in the ship , and to have shewed her for a strange wonder in Holland ; but she used such force , that they were glad that they were rid of her , and contented themselves with her skinne only , for shee ...
... thought to have carryed her alive in the ship , and to have shewed her for a strange wonder in Holland ; but she used such force , that they were glad that they were rid of her , and contented themselves with her skinne only , for shee ...
Almindelige termer og sætninger
Alan answered appeared bark barque blood blow boat body cabin Cape Horn Captain Crimp cockswain Colonel Hope-Kennedy creature crew cried dark dead deck devil-fish door Duke of Parma English exclaimed eyes face feet fell felucca Finn fire flogged Flying Dutchman fo'c'sl forebridge forecastle frigate gale guns hand head heard Killarney Lady Monson land Lanyard lieutenant light look Lord Admirall mangroves marines master-at-arms masts mate midshipman Miss Laura monster mouth never night oars overboard Paimpol passed phantom ship pistol port pulled punishment rigging round round shot sail sailors says schooner sea-serpent seemed seen serpent ship's shore shot shouted side sight Spaniards Spanish Fleete spectral ship spectre-ship stood struck thought told took turned unto vessel voice whale Wilfrid wind wounded wreck yacht yards