| Tobias Smollett - 1783 - 520 trang
...as equals any thing of the fame kind of which we read in hiftory. The men butchered in the prefence of their wives and children ; the women and children afterwards thrown alive into the fea; of the women, fomc, on account of their beauty, preferved alive for a few days to fatizite the... | |
| 1783 - 568 trang
...as equals any thing of the fame kind of which ivc read in hirtory. The men butchered in the pretence of their wives and children ; the women and children afterwards thrown alive into the fea ; of the women, fomc, on account of their beauty, prefcrved alive for a few days to fatinte the... | |
| Edmund Burke - 1785 - 652 trang
...as equals any thing of the fame kind of which we read in hiftory. The men butchered in the prefence of their wives and children ; the women and children afterwards thrown alive into the fea ; of the women, fome, on account of their beauty, preferved alive* for a few days to fatiate the... | |
| Robert Watson, William Thomson - 1792 - 390 trang
...as equals any thing of the fame kind of which we read in hiftory. The men butchered in the prefence of their wives and children : the women and children afterwards thrown alive into the fea ; of the women , fome, on account of their beauty, preferved alive for a few days to fatiate the... | |
| John Wesley - 1792 - 728 trang
...as equals any thing of the fame kind of which we read in hiftory. The men butchered in the prefence of their wives and children ; the women and children afterwards thrown alive into the fea. Of the women, fome on account of their beauty were preferred alive for a few days, to fatiate... | |
| 1800 - 632 trang
...as equals any thing of the fame kind of which we read in hiftory. The men butchered in the prefence of their wives and children ; the women and children afterwards thrown alive into the, fea ; of the women, fome, on ac. count of their beauty, preserved alive for a few days to latíate... | |
| 1800 - 608 trang
...as equals any thing of the fame kind of which we read in biltory. The men butchered in the pretence of their wives and children ; the women and children afterwards thrown alive into the fea ; of the women, fome, on account of their beauty, preferved alive for a few days to fatiate the... | |
| Robert Watson, William Thomson - 1818 - 304 trang
...passage, and never reached the African coast ; while many others were barbarously murdered at sea, by the crews of the ships which they had freighted...some, on account of their beauty, preserved alive for a few days to satiate the lust of the inhuman murderers of their husbands and brothers, and then... | |
| 1783 - 540 trang
...as ecjuals any thing of the fame kind of which we n*1 in hiftory. The men huuh'Ttd in the picfence of their wives and children ; the women and children afterwards thrown alive into the fea; of the women, fome, on account of their beauty, pielervcd aiive for a few dn-s to feiiate the... | |
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