| Henry Howard Brownell - 1853 - 734 páginas
...of the mysterious Khan. "Hereupon," says old Galvano, "there grcwe such a common desire of trauaile among the Spanyards, that they were ready to leape...it had been possible, into those new found parts." A fleet of seventeen vessels, mostly of a small class, was speedily equipped; and great preparations... | |
| Henry Howard Brownell - 1855 - 738 páginas
...of the mysterious Khan. "Hereupon," says old Galvano, "there grewe such a common desire of trauaile among the Spanyards, that they were ready to leape...it had been possible, into those new found parts." A fleet of seventeen vessels, mostly of a small class, was speedily equipped; and great preparations... | |
| William Henry Milburn - 1860 - 480 páginas
...which fell upon Spain in consequence of the early American discoveries, that they " were ready to leap into the sea to swim, if it had been possible, into those new-found parts." There is no stronger or stranger exemplification of the steady obstinacy with which... | |
| Henry Howard Brownell - 1862 - 524 páginas
...fortunes to the enterprise. "Hereupon," says Galvano, "there grewe such a common desire of trauaile among the Spanyards that they were ready to leape into the sea to swim, if it had been possible, to those new found parts." With remarkable promptitude, seventeen vessels were equipped, and loaded... | |
| Henry Howard Brownell - 1863 - 562 páginas
...fortunes to the enterprise. "Hereupon," says Galvano, "there grewe such a common desire of trauaile among the Spanyards that they were ready to leape into the sea to swim, if it had been possible, to those new found parts." . With remarkable promptitude, seventeen vessels were equipped, and loaded... | |
| Henry Smith Williams - 1904 - 702 páginas
...numbers, till, as Galvanoc said in Hakluyt's version, "there grew such a common desire of travaile among the Spanyards, that they were ready to leape...the sea to swim, if it had been possible, into those new-found parts." Once the first voyage had been made imitation was so easy that, as Columbus wrote,... | |
| Charles Loftus Grant Anderson - 1911 - 720 páginas
...as planned, fifteen hundred crowded and stowed themselves away on the ships. "Men were ready to leap into the sea to swim, if it had been possible, into those new-found parts," so wild were they to get to the Land of Gold. Among the notables on the fleet, or... | |
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