| 1790 - 640 trang
...to the boats in great numbers, attempted to take away the oars, mufkets, and, in fhort, e\ery thing they could lay hold of; and preffed fo thick ]upon...directed, as if nothing of the kind had happened. Mr. Williamfon told me, that after the man fell, his countrymen took him up, carried him otf, and then... | |
| Robert Kerr - 1815 - 546 trang
...take away the oars, musqaets, and, in short, every thing that they could lay hold of, and pressed so thick upon him, that he was obliged to fire, by which one man was killed. But this unhappy circumstance 1 One can scarcely help smiling at the mode Dr Kippis uses to express his abhorrence of... | |
| Robert Kerr - 1824 - 526 trang
..."take away the oars, musquets, and, in short, every thing that they could lay hold of, and pressed so thick upon him, that he was obliged to fire, by which one man was killed. But this unhappy circumstance 1 One can scarcely help smiling at the mode Dr Kippis uses to express his abhorrence of... | |
| Andrew Kippis - 1826 - 464 trang
...their endeavours to seize upon the oars, muskets, and, in short, every thing they could lay hold of, that he was obliged to fire, by which one man was killed. This unhappy circumstance was not known to Captain Cook till after he had left the island; so that... | |
| James Cook - 1842 - 654 trang
...take away the oars, muskets, and, in short, everything that they could lay hold of; and pressed so thick upon him that he was obliged to fire, by which one man was killed. But this unhappy circumstance I did not know till after we had left the island ; so that all my measures were directed... | |
| Andrew Kippis - 1853 - 468 trang
...their endeavours to seize upon the oars, muskets, and, in §hort every thing they could lay hold of, that he was obliged to fire, by which, one man was killed. This unhappy circumstance was not known to Captain Cook till after he had left the island ; so that... | |
| David Laing Purves - 1874 - 856 trang
...to tnke away the oars, muskets, and in short everything that they could lay hold of, and pressed so thick upon him that he was obliged to fire, by which one man was killed. But this unhappy circumstance I did not know till after we had left the island, so that all my measures were directed... | |
| James Cook - 1880 - 538 trang
...to take away the oars, muskets, and in short everything that they could lay hold of, and pressed so thick upon him that he was obliged to fire, by which one man was killed. This unhappy circumstance I did not know till after we had left the island, so that all my measures... | |
| William De Witt Alexander - 1891 - 390 trang
...thick upon him, trying to take away the oars, muskets, and every thing else they could lay hold of, that he was obliged to fire, by which one man was killed." Landing at Waimea. — The ships soon afterward anchored in Waimea Bay, and between three and four... | |
| Ainsworth Rand Spofford, Charles Gibbon - 1893 - 516 trang
...their endeavors to seize 11 pon the oars, muskets, and. in short, everything they could lay hold of, that he was obliged to fire, by which one man was killed. This unhappy circumstance was not known to Captain Cook till after he had left the island ; so that... | |
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