This is a table of type quadgram and their frequencies. Use it to search & browse the list to learn more about your study carrel.
quadgram | frequency |
---|---|
the church of england | 31 |
for the most part | 29 |
the word of god | 24 |
early english books online | 23 |
the rest of the | 23 |
notes for div a | 18 |
sir thomas smith treasurer | 17 |
the most part of | 17 |
in the midst of | 16 |
as big as a | 15 |
a great part of | 14 |
the head of the | 14 |
in the meane time | 14 |
the lord la ware | 13 |
high court of parliament | 12 |
in the beginning of | 12 |
the i le of | 12 |
by reason of the | 11 |
two or three hundred | 11 |
to the number of | 11 |
their bowes and arrowes | 11 |
the assembly of divines | 11 |
of the church of | 11 |
the high court of | 10 |
of two or three | 10 |
a quarter of a | 10 |
in a short time | 10 |
in the time of | 10 |
by the meanes of | 10 |
returned to iames towne | 10 |
the forme of a | 10 |
represented either as utf | 10 |
for the good of | 10 |
characters represented either as | 10 |
in the forme of | 10 |
of the i le | 10 |
in two or three | 9 |
in regard of the | 9 |
the arriuall of the | 9 |
on the one side | 9 |
the end of the | 8 |
of god in the | 8 |
the name of the | 8 |
from place to place | 8 |
the good of the | 8 |
the discovery of the | 8 |
all the rest of | 8 |
the names of the | 8 |
on the other side | 8 |
and the rest of | 8 |
of the lord la | 8 |
the bigness of a | 8 |
the next day we | 8 |
the most of them | 8 |
vnder the command of | 8 |
there is also a | 8 |
some of them are | 8 |
the top of the | 8 |
fled into the woods | 7 |
of the king of | 7 |
during the time of | 7 |
the next morning we | 7 |
works of god in | 7 |
on the north side | 7 |
by the word of | 7 |
the temperature of the | 7 |
one hundred and fifty | 7 |
not so much as | 7 |
the nature of the | 7 |
god in the creatures | 7 |
our brethren of scotland | 7 |
ordinances and proceedings of | 7 |
by the name of | 7 |
most part of the | 7 |
to the place of | 7 |
and so we returned | 7 |
and all the rest | 7 |
the gouernment of captaine | 7 |
in the end of | 7 |
for the maintenance of | 7 |
three quarters of a | 7 |
we returned to our | 7 |
of sir thomas gates | 7 |
as big as an | 6 |
the manner of the | 6 |
so that a man | 6 |
and some of them | 6 |
the greatest part of | 6 |
providing financial support to | 6 |
the mouth of the | 6 |
and the most of | 6 |
support to the early | 6 |
to the terms of | 6 |
to returne for england | 6 |
described above is co | 6 |
the inhabitants of summer | 6 |
by the institutions providing | 6 |
the use of the | 6 |
the latter end of | 6 |
i text is available | 6 |
to the knowledge of | 6 |
english books online text | 6 |
financial support to the | 6 |
there are a number | 6 |
the bignesse of a | 6 |
the description of the | 6 |
coded from proquest page | 6 |
thus you may see | 6 |
of the bigness of | 6 |
the good will of | 6 |
all without asking permission | 6 |
terms of creative commons | 6 |
to all the world | 6 |
the next day the | 6 |
in the west indies | 6 |
markup reviewed and edited | 6 |
and such things as | 6 |
of one hundred and | 6 |
even for commercial purposes | 6 |
the text can be | 6 |
to the early english | 6 |
institutions providing financial support | 6 |
the ordinance for tythes | 6 |
the early english books | 6 |
to the consideration of | 6 |
the work described above | 6 |
of fish and fowle | 6 |
quarter of a mile | 6 |
the institutions providing financial | 6 |
keyboarded and encoded edition | 6 |
according to the terms | 6 |
the feare of god | 6 |
others to the number | 6 |
the terms of creative | 6 |
of the inhabitants of | 6 |
from proquest page images | 6 |
online text creation partnership | 6 |
the estate of the | 6 |
tcp assigned for keying | 6 |
text and markup reviewed | 6 |
edition of the work | 6 |
by sea and land | 6 |
work described above is | 6 |
from time to time | 6 |
this keyboarded and encoded | 6 |
are a number of | 6 |
text can be copied | 6 |
side of this river | 6 |
assigned for keying and | 6 |
for keying and markup | 6 |
encoded edition of the | 6 |
encoded text transcribed from | 6 |
reverend young martin mar | 6 |
images scanned from microfilm | 6 |
phase i text is | 6 |
all the year long | 6 |
keyed and coded from | 6 |
for the building of | 6 |
one of the voyage | 6 |
the arraignment of persecution | 6 |
wonderful works of god | 6 |
it pleased god to | 6 |
and coded from proquest | 6 |
owned by the institutions | 6 |
the bottom of the | 6 |
and markup reviewed and | 6 |
the wonderful works of | 6 |
of the work described | 6 |
this phase i text | 6 |
came to an anchor | 6 |
and proceedings of this | 6 |
a description of the | 6 |
and encoded edition of | 6 |
text is available for | 6 |
the most of the | 6 |
body of the tree | 6 |
from hand to mouth | 6 |
books online text creation | 6 |
at the end of | 6 |
is available for reuse | 6 |
to a limit of | 5 |
and markup guidelines are | 5 |
a partnership between the | 5 |
fruits of their labours | 5 |
in all likelihood such | 5 |
names of the adventurers | 5 |
of a work was | 5 |
available at the text | 5 |
true nature of the | 5 |
the generall historie of | 5 |
and therefore chose to | 5 |
a second or later | 5 |
the fruits of their | 5 |
michigan and oxford and | 5 |
in the i le | 5 |
text strings within braces | 5 |
of works in other | 5 |
to the end of | 5 |
should make clear that | 5 |
out by editorial teams | 5 |
credit and attribution is | 5 |
based on the image | 5 |
large quantities of textual | 5 |
of gaps by user | 5 |
reason to do so | 5 |
to encode one copy | 5 |
mnemonic sdata character entities | 5 |
corrected and characters marked | 5 |
where possible up to | 5 |
encoded as gap s | 5 |
image sets published by | 5 |
usual project restraints of | 5 |
each shall haue crownes | 5 |
processes should make clear | 5 |
phase of the project | 5 |
universities of michigan and | 5 |
the consideration of the | 5 |
did not meet qa | 5 |
the power and authority | 5 |
the filling in of | 5 |
on the top of | 5 |
a compelling reason to | 5 |
the true nature of | 5 |
based on the text | 5 |
and attribution is given | 5 |
during phase of the | 5 |
is given to their | 5 |
elements to simplify the | 5 |
opposed to critical editions | 5 |
is as big as | 5 |
bear in mind that | 5 |
proceedings of this present | 5 |
in the isle of | 5 |
their heads and shoulders | 5 |
of this present parliament | 5 |
domain as of january | 5 |
creation partnership web site | 5 |
text was proofread for | 5 |
any remaining illegibles were | 5 |
possible up to a | 5 |
on the text encoding | 5 |
at large in the | 5 |
and all manner of | 5 |
and a half long | 5 |
sets were sent to | 5 |
of each text was | 5 |
not meet qa standards | 5 |
the text creation partnership | 5 |
whichever is the greater | 5 |
chosen if there was | 5 |
accuracy and those which | 5 |
variety of subject areas | 5 |
to doe any thing | 5 |
images in accordance with | 5 |
over a wide variety | 5 |
his returne for england | 5 |
never have been looked | 5 |
in regard of their | 5 |
general aim of eebo | 5 |
take and use these | 5 |
created during phase of | 5 |
the maintenance of the | 5 |
if there was a | 5 |
the process of creating | 5 |
then all the rest | 5 |
instances will never have | 5 |
good will of the | 5 |
estate of the colony | 5 |
text creation partnership web | 5 |
of instances per text | 5 |
returned to the keyers | 5 |
created by converting tcp | 5 |
quantities of textual data | 5 |
readable characters will be | 5 |
quarters of a yard | 5 |
when they come to | 5 |
matters of gods worship | 5 |
although there are a | 5 |
was then carried out | 5 |
to range over a | 5 |
on the new cambridge | 5 |
aimed to produce large | 5 |
friend captaine iohn smith | 5 |
then their works are | 5 |
characters marked as illegible | 5 |
markup guidelines are available | 5 |
public domain as of | 5 |
in of gaps by | 5 |
was chosen if there | 5 |
works in english were | 5 |
corrected where possible up | 5 |
to goe for england | 5 |
tcp is to encode | 5 |
a works in english | 5 |
the text encoding initiative | 5 |
any in the world | 5 |
in three or foure | 5 |
about the bigness of | 5 |
the manner of their | 5 |
are as big as | 5 |
mind that in all | 5 |
by the way we | 5 |
all likelihood such instances | 5 |
the rest of his | 5 |
keying and markup guidelines | 5 |
structural encoding based on | 5 |
the body of the | 5 |
or later edition of | 5 |
create accurately transcribed and | 5 |
transcription and basic encoding | 5 |
iv tiff page images | 5 |
but we respectfully request | 5 |
have been issued variously | 5 |
a limit of instances | 5 |
some errors will remain | 5 |
and therefore of any | 5 |
level of the tei | 5 |
project was divided into | 5 |
a wide variety of | 5 |
of the print record | 5 |
proquest to create accurately | 5 |
illegibles were encoded as | 5 |
selection was intended to | 5 |
a number of works | 5 |
companies for transcription and | 5 |
or text strings within | 5 |
released into the public | 5 |
those which did not | 5 |
wide variety of subject | 5 |
tei p using tcp | 5 |
been issued variously as | 5 |
processed by university of | 5 |
illegible were corrected where | 5 |
some as big as | 5 |
divided into two phases | 5 |
were corrected where possible | 5 |
there is a certain | 5 |
respectfully request that due | 5 |
two or three thousand | 5 |
in so much that | 5 |
of them to be | 5 |
via their early english | 5 |
as though they had | 5 |
quality assurance was then | 5 |
process of creating the | 5 |
some readable characters will | 5 |
mainly structural encoding based | 5 |
errors will remain and | 5 |
set saile for england | 5 |
accordance with level of | 5 |
have been looked at | 5 |
should bear in mind | 5 |
were returned to the | 5 |
as big as our | 5 |
and some readable characters | 5 |
honourable court of parliament | 5 |
standards were returned to | 5 |
for an anonymous work | 5 |
their works are eligible | 5 |
the encoding was enhanced | 5 |
page images in accordance | 5 |
to page images in | 5 |
project have been released | 5 |
of tcp data is | 5 |
was intended to range | 5 |
of some of the | 5 |
if they be not | 5 |
were encoded as gap | 5 |
in matters of religion | 5 |
while the overall quality | 5 |
due credit and attribution | 5 |
by university of nebraska | 5 |
bibliography of english literature | 5 |
anyone can now take | 5 |
the time of the | 5 |
conversion and holy conversation | 5 |
the glory of god | 5 |
tcp aimed to produce | 5 |
up to a limit | 5 |
texts were encoded and | 5 |
language title published between | 5 |
is a partnership between | 5 |
published between and available | 5 |
included and sometimes a | 5 |
p using tcp tei | 5 |
and encoded texts based | 5 |
the image sets published | 5 |
data is very good | 5 |
encoded and linked to | 5 |
texts for their own | 5 |
between the universities of | 5 |
of the project have | 5 |
of the texts have | 5 |
the north side of | 5 |
church of england is | 5 |
the public domain as | 5 |
with changes to facilitate | 5 |
in mind that in | 5 |
by proquest via their | 5 |
or elements to simplify | 5 |
but we found it | 5 |
the project have been | 5 |
are eligible for inclusion | 5 |
to produce large quantities | 5 |
be aware of the | 5 |
number of works in | 5 |
such instances will never | 5 |
the west side of | 5 |
likelihood such instances will | 5 |
as opposed to critical | 5 |
of every monographic english | 5 |
the building of ships | 5 |
encoding was enhanced and | 5 |
new cambridge bibliography of | 5 |
the publisher proquest to | 5 |
editorial teams in oxford | 5 |
foot and an half | 5 |
was a compelling reason | 5 |
the most of those | 5 |
of michigan and oxford | 5 |
reflect the true nature | 5 |
and those which did | 5 |
with level of the | 5 |
remaining illegibles were encoded | 5 |
was proofread for accuracy | 5 |
by a tcp editor | 5 |
or corrected and characters | 5 |
and available in eebo | 5 |
proquest via their early | 5 |
editions of a works | 5 |
of the tei in | 5 |
extent have been transformed | 5 |
users should be aware | 5 |
intended to range over | 5 |
two or three daies | 5 |
by converting tcp files | 5 |
notably latin and welsh | 5 |
and use these texts | 5 |
it out of the | 5 |
was based on the | 5 |
proofread for accuracy and | 5 |
will be marked as | 5 |
against the assembly and | 5 |
or for an anonymous | 5 |
the print record of | 5 |
encoding based on the | 5 |
or tei g elements | 5 |
selection was based on | 5 |
later edition of a | 5 |
as if they were | 5 |
the tei in libraries | 5 |
limit of instances per | 5 |
can now take and | 5 |
known extent have been | 5 |
to simplify the filling | 5 |
into placeholder characters or | 5 |
published by proquest via | 5 |
great part of the | 5 |
chose to create diplomatic | 5 |
is one of the | 5 |
these processes should make | 5 |
gap elements of known | 5 |
the women and children | 5 |
of the infidels children | 5 |
to sir thomas dale | 5 |
under the name of | 5 |
that can be made | 5 |
and or corrected and | 5 |
meet qa standards were | 5 |
parts of the world | 5 |
record of the period | 5 |
quality of tcp data | 5 |
these texts for their | 5 |
project restraints of time | 5 |
a work was chosen | 5 |
files to tei p | 5 |
and linked to page | 5 |
sometimes a second or | 5 |
by captaine iohn smith | 5 |
in the army and | 5 |
tcp project was divided | 5 |
keyers to be redone | 5 |
that in all likelihood | 5 |
and the publisher proquest | 5 |
the greatnesse of the | 5 |
at the mouth of | 5 |
issued variously as sgml | 5 |
gaps by user contributors | 5 |
usually the first edition | 5 |
understanding these processes should | 5 |
and what they had | 5 |
the usual project restraints | 5 |
now take and use | 5 |
and the next morning | 5 |
will remain and some | 5 |
was divided into two | 5 |
so we returned to | 5 |
the keyers to be | 5 |
for transcription and basic | 5 |
transformed into placeholder characters | 5 |
remain and some readable | 5 |
the seuerall blankes next | 5 |
first editions of a | 5 |
how they vse their | 5 |
texts created during phase | 5 |
converting tcp files to | 5 |
we respectfully request that | 5 |
in oxford and michigan | 5 |
data within the usual | 5 |
accurately transcribed and encoded | 5 |
to tei p using | 5 |
request that due credit | 5 |
be made about the | 5 |
two or three houres | 5 |
any assumptions that can | 5 |
range over a wide | 5 |
placeholder characters or elements | 5 |
external keying companies for | 5 |
the yeere of our | 5 |
unicode or text strings | 5 |
qa standards were returned | 5 |
cambridge bibliography of english | 5 |
then carried out by | 5 |
temperature of the air | 5 |
the next day they | 5 |
of the process of | 5 |
nature of the print | 5 |
restraints of time and | 5 |
creating the tcp texts | 5 |
simplify the filling in | 5 |
can be made about | 5 |
of any assumptions that | 5 |
have been transformed into | 5 |
produce large quantities of | 5 |
head of the river | 5 |
use these texts for | 5 |
that due credit and | 5 |
the arrivall of the | 5 |
of a works in | 5 |
second or later edition | 5 |
the east and west | 5 |
therefore of any assumptions | 5 |
out of his hand | 5 |
one hundred and fortie | 5 |
been looked at by | 5 |
of textual data within | 5 |
was enhanced and or | 5 |
encoded texts based on | 5 |
the reverend assembly of | 5 |
for their own purposes | 5 |
the councell and company | 5 |
assumptions that can be | 5 |
these and many other | 5 |
based on the new | 5 |
is to encode one | 5 |
in the mean time | 5 |
reverend assembly of divines | 5 |
text selection was based | 5 |
should be aware of | 5 |
are available at the | 5 |
changes to facilitate morpho | 5 |
therefore chose to create | 5 |
the texts were encoded | 5 |
ascii text with mnemonic | 5 |
tcp data is very | 5 |
such things as they | 5 |
each text was proofread | 5 |
of creating the tcp | 5 |
the general aim of | 5 |
the barkes of trees | 5 |
and oxford and the | 5 |
which did not meet | 5 |
in accordance with level | 5 |
texts have been issued | 5 |
tei in libraries guidelines | 5 |
been transformed into placeholder | 5 |
overall quality of tcp | 5 |
yeere of our lord | 5 |
aware of the process | 5 |
tcp files to tei | 5 |
publisher proquest to create | 5 |
were sent to external | 5 |
assurance was then carried | 5 |
three or foure dayes | 5 |
have been released into | 5 |
will never have been | 5 |
in new found land | 5 |
given to their original | 5 |
keying companies for transcription | 5 |
to create diplomatic transcriptions | 5 |
the texts have been | 5 |
characters or elements to | 5 |
of known extent have | 5 |
edition of a work | 5 |
looked at by a | 5 |
copies of the texts | 5 |
marked as illegible were | 5 |
oxford and the publisher | 5 |
works are eligible for | 5 |
now you are to | 5 |
at by a tcp | 5 |
print record of the | 5 |
to external keying companies | 5 |
there was a compelling | 5 |
the overall quality of | 5 |
compelling reason to do | 5 |
partnership between the universities | 5 |
been released into the | 5 |
into the public domain | 5 |
with mnemonic sdata character | 5 |
guidelines are available at | 5 |
transcribed and encoded texts | 5 |
unicode or tei g | 5 |
text with mnemonic sdata | 5 |
and characters marked as | 5 |
teams in oxford and | 5 |
at the text creation | 5 |
their early english books | 5 |
attribution is given to | 5 |
work was chosen if | 5 |
in english were prioritized | 5 |
and so returned for | 5 |
made about the data | 5 |
between and available in | 5 |
within the usual project | 5 |
hundred pound of tobacco | 5 |
to their original source | 5 |
to the top of | 5 |
filling in of gaps | 5 |
to reflect the true | 5 |
were encoded and linked | 5 |
on the image sets | 5 |
in matters of gods | 5 |
by editorial teams in | 5 |
title published between and | 5 |
to create accurately transcribed | 5 |
head of the bay | 5 |
is as good as | 5 |
image sets were sent | 5 |
and sometimes a second | 5 |
users should bear in | 5 |
be marked as illegible | 5 |
the new cambridge bibliography | 5 |
works in other languages | 5 |
as big as hens | 5 |
to the keyers to | 5 |
to the west indies | 5 |
texts based on the | 5 |
sets published by proquest | 5 |
as illegible were corrected | 5 |
sent to external keying | 5 |
enhanced and or corrected | 5 |
tcp is a partnership | 5 |
elements of known extent | 5 |
linked to page images | 5 |
of time and funding | 5 |
characters will be marked | 5 |
the universities of michigan | 5 |
for accuracy and those | 5 |
carried out by editorial | 5 |
textual data within the | 5 |
in the kingdom of | 4 |
foot and a half | 4 |
the kingdome of england | 4 |
one of them was | 4 |
you are to vnderstand | 4 |
in all the country | 4 |
vpon the riuer of | 4 |
in the country of | 4 |
that in a short | 4 |
inhabitants of summer islands | 4 |
with two or three | 4 |
of sir francis wyat | 4 |
east and west indies | 4 |
the midst of their | 4 |
to the charge of | 4 |
his holinesse reverend young | 4 |
testimony of their conversion | 4 |
the arriuall of sir | 4 |
myles from iames towne | 4 |
many of the inhabitants | 4 |
the power of parliament | 4 |
to him that putteth | 4 |
no more then the | 4 |
of a yard long | 4 |
for my owne part | 4 |
text notes for div | 4 |
on the south side | 4 |
we returned to iames | 4 |
state into new combustions | 4 |
a volley of shot | 4 |
with all manner of | 4 |
by reason of their | 4 |
be content with the | 4 |
to the directory of | 4 |
side of the bay | 4 |
if it were not | 4 |
for the use of | 4 |
there is a river | 4 |
by the honourable company | 4 |
in the middest of | 4 |
at the bottom of | 4 |
that putteth in the | 4 |
one of them being | 4 |
ir thomas smith treasurer | 4 |
were it not for | 4 |
the committee of examinations | 4 |
at the head of | 4 |
the sacred synodicall decretall | 4 |
and authority of the | 4 |
the middle of the | 4 |
original text notes for | 4 |
their women and children | 4 |
the order of the | 4 |
a parliament and synod | 4 |
at the same time | 4 |
more then an hundred | 4 |
the heat of the | 4 |
in the space of | 4 |
in the behalfe of | 4 |
on the north of | 4 |
to the word of | 4 |
the accidents that befell | 4 |
planted by the english | 4 |
that have lost their | 4 |
a fresh discovery of | 4 |
so much as the | 4 |
when they saw vs | 4 |
the government of the | 4 |
the form of a | 4 |
so returned for england | 4 |
north side of this | 4 |
our church and state | 4 |
of sir iohn presbyter | 4 |
the liberty of conscience | 4 |
the liberty of their | 4 |
during which time they | 4 |
to abandon the country | 4 |
the place where he | 4 |
like ours in england | 4 |
voyage about the world | 4 |
holinesse reverend young martin | 4 |
within the space of | 4 |
of the bignesse of | 4 |
it in the sun | 4 |
church and state into | 4 |
and state into new | 4 |
called the assembly of | 4 |
till at last they | 4 |
of them that were | 4 |
he sent to the | 4 |
to iames towne to | 4 |
solemne league and covenant | 4 |
in the discovery of | 4 |
the coast of england | 4 |
the beginning of this | 4 |
and to all the | 4 |
a representation of the | 4 |
into a way of | 4 |
and many other such | 4 |
so well as the | 4 |
what they had to | 4 |
the tenth of may | 4 |
to goe with them | 4 |
in form of a | 4 |
we returned to the | 4 |
reproduction of the original | 4 |
i shall give you | 4 |
the company of london | 4 |
sent to the west | 4 |
the building of a | 4 |
bestrided in their persons | 4 |
the late solemne league | 4 |
such commodities as they | 4 |
within an houre after | 4 |
ready vpon any occasion | 4 |
north part of virginia | 4 |
the beginning of iuly | 4 |
the next day to | 4 |
of ships and men | 4 |
and not long after | 4 |
as any in the | 4 |
rest of the saluages | 4 |
of the summer islands | 4 |
content with the good | 4 |
the king of paspahegh | 4 |
they have which are | 4 |
as you haue heard | 4 |
of the same colour | 4 |
to the value of | 4 |
they could not be | 4 |
being a representation of | 4 |
the cause of the | 4 |
is not to be | 4 |
the king of spaine | 4 |
which is of a | 4 |
both he and his | 4 |
from the place where | 4 |
the beginning of the | 4 |
and many of the | 4 |
complained of in the | 4 |
admirall of new england | 4 |
the place where they | 4 |
and is it not | 4 |
some of our men | 4 |
number of ships and | 4 |
in the month of | 4 |
in the night they | 4 |
and the next day | 4 |
is a kind of | 4 |
and in some places | 4 |
the answer of the | 4 |
every person and persons | 4 |
at large you may | 4 |
of church and state | 4 |
they could not finde | 4 |
the original text notes | 4 |
some part of the | 4 |
him that putteth in | 4 |
of the kingdome of | 4 |
the tops of the | 4 |
the command of captaine | 4 |
because he would not | 4 |
men in a boat | 4 |
the goodnesse of the | 4 |
set down in writing | 4 |
the araignment of persecution | 4 |
almost as big as | 4 |
a day or two | 4 |
of the original in | 4 |
firing our church and | 4 |
at a low water | 4 |
which they have no | 4 |
in the form of | 4 |
established to be observed | 4 |
the knowledge of the | 4 |
the hearts of the | 4 |
the number of ships | 4 |
about the end of | 4 |
not long after came | 4 |
well furnished with all | 4 |
the governour and councell | 4 |
did their best to | 4 |
in the riuer of | 4 |
the space of three | 4 |
as they had done | 4 |
when it comes to | 4 |
with the hazard of | 4 |
the subversion of the | 4 |
of their conversion and | 4 |
see if he could | 4 |
of the honourable company | 4 |
in forme of a | 4 |
the present estate of | 4 |
on the west side | 4 |
in a little boat | 4 |
to trade with the | 4 |
by vertue of the | 4 |
and many other things | 4 |
that they could not | 4 |
the north part of | 4 |
state of the inhabitants | 4 |
from the original text | 4 |
people bestrided in their | 4 |
who all this time | 4 |
they would have us | 4 |
in the yeere of | 4 |
arriuall of sir thomas | 4 |
and such as shall | 4 |
of peace and warre | 4 |
of peace with the | 4 |
the death of his | 4 |
s ir thomas smith | 4 |
vpon the coast of | 4 |
and an half long | 4 |
and the summer isles | 4 |
with the good will | 4 |
for there is no | 4 |
of sir thomas dale | 4 |
if you please to | 4 |
the government of this | 4 |
they are forced to | 4 |
nature of the soil | 4 |
which is the cause | 4 |
conuersion of the saluages | 4 |
that they were not | 4 |
but from hand to | 4 |
and are to be | 4 |
late solemne league and | 4 |
in the island of | 4 |
so much as we | 3 |
in which they returned | 3 |
that they dare not | 3 |
did what they could | 3 |
a mile from the | 3 |
in his answer to | 3 |
to be observed in | 3 |
one of them will | 3 |
in the worst of | 3 |
a long time after | 3 |
seene or heard of | 3 |
the king of the | 3 |
of the subjects liberties | 3 |
by the helpe of | 3 |
part of the councell | 3 |
petition presented to the | 3 |
those countryes admirall of | 3 |
with a kind of | 3 |
all such as shall | 3 |
waves of the sea | 3 |
arriuall of that famous | 3 |
to the higher powers | 3 |
our church of england | 3 |
humbly offered to the | 3 |
writ this with his | 3 |
ordinances of both houses | 3 |
as well as they | 3 |
published for the common | 3 |
divers others to the | 3 |
as if it were | 3 |
that the next day | 3 |
yet are they so | 3 |
happy arriuall of that | 3 |
but at last it | 3 |
by the death of | 3 |
of the english in | 3 |
of in the petition | 3 |
and in regard of | 3 |
descriptions of all those | 3 |
three or four dayes | 3 |
were not able to | 3 |
will of the vulgar | 3 |
by the law of | 3 |
not long after the | 3 |
as if it had | 3 |
of the most of | 3 |
from the head of | 3 |
some of the inhabitants | 3 |
not much unlike a | 3 |
within a league of | 3 |
there is such plenty | 3 |
collected by samuel clarke | 3 |
or the most part | 3 |
best order he could | 3 |
under the hands of | 3 |
in some places clay | 3 |
ecclesiasticall jurisdiction and power | 3 |
much to haue beene | 3 |
to vsurpe the government | 3 |
the bodies of the | 3 |
prynne of lincolnes inne | 3 |
two or three dayes | 3 |
the ecclesiasticall jurisdiction and | 3 |
more then one hundred | 3 |
with a moderate heat | 3 |
yet for all this | 3 |
it is strange to | 3 |
affixed to the petition | 3 |
of two hundred tunnes | 3 |
as much as any | 3 |
to lay down their | 3 |
william prynne of lincolnes | 3 |
and the well reputed | 3 |
for the common good | 3 |
had like to haue | 3 |
till the end of | 3 |
they returned into virginia | 3 |
of one hundred tunnes | 3 |
to the councell and | 3 |
some letters and papers | 3 |
of the trading party | 3 |
in the gouernment of | 3 |
the reformation of virginia | 3 |
for as much as | 3 |
with all sorts of | 3 |
shall give you a | 3 |
i shall begin with | 3 |
as all the rest | 3 |
with forty or fifty | 3 |
procedings of those severall | 3 |
as is formerly related | 3 |
the king and the | 3 |
four chiefest plantations of | 3 |
is to be seen | 3 |
but many of them | 3 |
a mine of gold | 3 |
both by sea and | 3 |
out of the water | 3 |
but by the way | 3 |
to the easterne shore | 3 |
some of the chiefe | 3 |
they came to the | 3 |
seuerall blankes next after | 3 |
inhabitants of the summer | 3 |
of this their church | 3 |
and fifty foot high | 3 |
with all possible speed | 3 |
haue done as much | 3 |
the ordinances and proceedings | 3 |
one tree to another | 3 |
to refresh our selues | 3 |
a bunch of feathers | 3 |
and shoulders painted red | 3 |
the four chiefest plantations | 3 |
and the accidents that | 3 |
and descriptions of all | 3 |
which is more then | 3 |
both in church and | 3 |
lesse then an houre | 3 |
the lord la warre | 3 |
i doubt not but | 3 |
i neuer heard of | 3 |
they are very strong | 3 |
befell them in all | 3 |
and religion yet knowne | 3 |
breach of peace with | 3 |
of sir george summers | 3 |
fresh discovery of some | 3 |
presented to the high | 3 |
betweene wind and water | 3 |
with his owne hand | 3 |
with the procedings of | 3 |
a chayne of pearle | 3 |
out of the sea | 3 |
the fruits of the | 3 |
the sight of a | 3 |
the bermuda company to | 3 |
answer of the bermuda | 3 |
out of the councels | 3 |
the king of patawomek | 3 |
in the south sea | 3 |
we had but one | 3 |
with the maner of | 3 |
for which he was | 3 |
the sacrament of the | 3 |
so returned to our | 3 |
the imprisoning of mr | 3 |
distraction and prejudice of | 3 |
the fruit is like | 3 |
in defence of the | 3 |
the head of this | 3 |
the matters complained of | 3 |
and the honourable company | 3 |
let flie their arrowes | 3 |
the rest of their | 3 |
with hooks and lines | 3 |
may reade at large | 3 |
and when they come | 3 |
the time of his | 3 |
of any such matter | 3 |
and all his company | 3 |
in gathering their new | 3 |
of one of the | 3 |
the blacknesse of darknesse | 3 |
west side of the | 3 |
the consent of the | 3 |
of some prodigious new | 3 |
of the parliament and | 3 |
which they call a | 3 |
which caused vs to | 3 |
order from the company | 3 |
from the church of | 3 |
up the people to | 3 |
to bring them to | 3 |
before the committee of | 3 |
iohn smith sometymes governour | 3 |
of the kings castle | 3 |
some of the baser | 3 |
of both houses of | 3 |
the common good by | 3 |
of all the rest | 3 |
the hazard of our | 3 |
of which they make | 3 |
are to be had | 3 |
well reputed valiant captaine | 3 |
true worship of god | 3 |
for all the rest | 3 |
they build their houses | 3 |
them at iames towne | 3 |
the maior part of | 3 |
the knowledge of god | 3 |
a committee of parliament | 3 |
to abandon the countrey | 3 |
sacrament of the lords | 3 |
and most of the | 3 |
the relation of the | 3 |
trade with the salvages | 3 |
as it were a | 3 |
the great distraction and | 3 |
for new found land | 3 |
the satisfaction of the | 3 |
to the matters complained | 3 |
iohn smith writ this | 3 |
and faithful account of | 3 |
short illustrations upon a | 3 |
in church and state | 3 |
from the west indies | 3 |
you may reade at | 3 |
the command of the | 3 |
they make of the | 3 |
to the king of | 3 |
and papers lately sent | 3 |
and by the power | 3 |
it was no small | 3 |
reade at large in | 3 |
the splinter of a | 3 |
account of the four | 3 |
to haue made a | 3 |
of it they make | 3 |
we were constrained to | 3 |
at the place where | 3 |
an account of their | 3 |
to come on shore | 3 |
the original in the | 3 |
in the ground like | 3 |
that all the people | 3 |
by william prynne of | 3 |
of any thing but | 3 |
great distraction and prejudice | 3 |
of their distresse in | 3 |
smith writ this with | 3 |
one amongst the rest | 3 |
after the rate for | 3 |
to goe with him | 3 |
the maps and descriptions | 3 |
for the glory of | 3 |
captaine iohn smith sometymes | 3 |
both houses of parliament | 3 |
when they are ripe | 3 |
countryes admirall of new | 3 |
a letter to the | 3 |
him into the sea | 3 |
when they had it | 3 |
famous and worthy knight | 3 |
miles to the north | 3 |
they were not so | 3 |
is strange to see | 3 |
some of them who | 3 |
and so returned to | 3 |
not being able to | 3 |
substance which they call | 3 |
but in the beginning | 3 |
in manner of a | 3 |
it in a morter | 3 |
divided into ten sections | 3 |
chiefest plantations of the | 3 |
as fast as a | 3 |
of the river of | 3 |
maner of their distresse | 3 |
in the petition of | 3 |
much as we could | 3 |
from the honourable company | 3 |
that nothing could be | 3 |
peace with the salvages | 3 |
and power of parliaments | 3 |
one of the councell | 3 |
not suffer them to | 3 |
that there is no | 3 |
by the authority aforesaid | 3 |
of some independents there | 3 |
we came to an | 3 |
arrivall of sir thomas | 3 |
in so much as | 3 |
papers lately sent from | 3 |
at the beginning of | 3 |
is but a small | 3 |
ordered to be published | 3 |
of the losse of | 3 |
it may be you | 3 |
no person or persons | 3 |
a great deale of | 3 |
is a kinde of | 3 |
as they can devise | 3 |
the lost flocke triumphant | 3 |
of the church and | 3 |
the mercy of god | 3 |
would haue slaine him | 3 |
of three or four | 3 |
a great charge and | 3 |
he would not suffer | 3 |
the worship of the | 3 |
plenty of fish and | 3 |
lay down their armes | 3 |
the trust reposed in | 3 |
ordinance of both houses | 3 |
the best order he | 3 |
to wash his hands | 3 |
it is most certaine | 3 |
to haue beene cast | 3 |
of the councels letters | 3 |
in the next place | 3 |
the contents of the | 3 |
but in the night | 3 |
one hundred and forty | 3 |
a quarter of an | 3 |
any thing at all | 3 |
dejected state of the | 3 |
so that there is | 3 |
three or foure hundred | 3 |
i le to i | 3 |
there is great store | 3 |
him to iames towne | 3 |
in the preceding sections | 3 |
them in all their | 3 |
the mouth of a | 3 |
fury of the salvages | 3 |
which they call the | 3 |
as you may reade | 3 |
and so after the | 3 |
in the same latitude | 3 |
of parliament for redresse | 3 |
they set saile in | 3 |
smith sometymes governour in | 3 |
for which they have | 3 |
at which time the | 3 |
euer seene or heard | 3 |
till the midst of | 3 |
from their first beginning | 3 |
place to plant in | 3 |
and diuers other sorts | 3 |
one of them with | 3 |
to the great distraction | 3 |
by that we had | 3 |
and some of the | 3 |
the church of god | 3 |
an i le of | 3 |
to make triall of | 3 |
their wives and children | 3 |
the happy arriuall of | 3 |
a boat of two | 3 |
the king of spain | 3 |
in the nature of | 3 |
ought not to be | 3 |
of those that are | 3 |
that is not ordained | 3 |
a short time it | 3 |
the hazard of his | 3 |
any of them had | 3 |
is not ordained a | 3 |
parliament and its proceedings | 3 |
of the honourable the | 3 |
that famous and worthy | 3 |
a peece of amber | 3 |
the son of god | 3 |
there is but one | 3 |
representation of the dejected | 3 |
of their own making | 3 |
offensive to good christians | 3 |
more then two hundred | 3 |
and the most part | 3 |
for the reformation of | 3 |
heads and shoulders painted | 3 |
the head of it | 3 |
accidents that befell them | 3 |
you may see the | 3 |
the maintenance of them | 3 |
as much as they | 3 |
came boldly aboord vs | 3 |
three or foure of | 3 |
the well reputed valiant | 3 |
the governour and assembly | 3 |
and governours from their | 3 |
and ought to be | 3 |
tree is like a | 3 |
twice or thrice in | 3 |
is of a pure | 3 |
discovery of some prodigious | 3 |
of life and death | 3 |
plantations of the english | 3 |
but when they had | 3 |
scepter out of his | 3 |
of the baser sort | 3 |
smith taketh the king | 3 |
as it were the | 3 |
in a little time | 3 |
sir thomas dale hath | 3 |
prejudice of that plantation | 3 |
betwixt the degrees of | 3 |
to a kinde of | 3 |
of all those countryes | 3 |
within two or three | 3 |
the opinion of captaine | 3 |
of that famous and | 3 |
in the morning when | 3 |
and by this meanes | 3 |
the plantation of the | 3 |
of the company in | 3 |
whereunto some letters and | 3 |
the nativity of sir | 3 |
place in the world | 3 |
he intended to haue | 3 |
yet such was the | 3 |
those severall colonies and | 3 |
the conuersion of the | 3 |
that they were in | 3 |
and by and by | 3 |
of the clocke in | 3 |
in which the water | 3 |
the heads of the | 3 |
of the dejected state | 3 |
no bigger then a | 3 |
desired to know the | 3 |
holinesse sir simon synod | 3 |
till it came to | 3 |
speak evill of dignities | 3 |
they are of a | 3 |
parts of the countrey | 3 |
letters and papers lately | 3 |
sent sir thomas gates | 3 |
within foureteene daies after | 3 |
but most of them | 3 |
le to i le | 3 |
but at last they | 3 |
to the wonder of | 3 |
or thrice in a | 3 |
faithful account of the | 3 |
matters complained of in | 3 |
to heare and see | 3 |
and not so good | 3 |
things as they had | 3 |
consideration of the honourable | 3 |
parliament and synod in | 3 |
the dejected state of | 3 |
the diuision of the | 3 |
of all sorts of | 3 |
but at last she | 3 |
out with a blanke | 3 |
or three hundred men | 3 |
so after the rate | 3 |
christian kings and magistrates | 3 |
on the south with | 3 |
they go to the | 3 |
thousand rialls of eight | 3 |
the parliament and assembly | 3 |
from the power of | 3 |
the bay and rivers | 3 |
to iames towne with | 3 |
was kindly entertained by | 3 |
to stir up the | 3 |
some of them to | 3 |
burgisses assembled in parliament | 3 |
a prey to the | 3 |
they come to be | 3 |
in one of them | 3 |
in a small barke | 3 |
a peece of copper | 3 |
governour in those countryes | 3 |
in the bottome of | 3 |
which they returned into | 3 |
if it be not | 3 |
copy of a letter | 3 |
such things as he | 3 |
aboue all the rest | 3 |
the law of the | 3 |
the arrivall of sir | 3 |
of this river is | 3 |
hundred bushels of corne | 3 |
the treasurer and councell | 3 |
they nourish their young | 3 |
blankes next after them | 3 |
the directory of parliament | 3 |
towards the building of | 3 |
and one in the | 3 |
were about two hundred | 3 |
the lord de la | 3 |
maior part of the | 3 |
with the rest of | 3 |
the arriuall of captaine | 3 |
the midst of the | 3 |
extracted out of the | 3 |
is made of the | 3 |
foure or fiue houres | 3 |
power and authority of | 3 |
king of paspahegh prisoner | 3 |
sufficient testimony of their | 3 |
the land there is | 3 |
that a man may | 3 |
according to my duty | 3 |
in iune and iuly | 3 |
and that which is | 3 |
severall colonies and the | 3 |
they have in great | 3 |
the honourable court of | 3 |
is such plenty of | 3 |
the procedings of those | 3 |
opposers of independent novelties | 3 |
the infidels children in | 3 |
offered to the consideration | 3 |
as we could carry | 3 |
in obedience to the | 3 |
they have no names | 3 |
i haue not seene | 3 |
many of them are | 3 |
cast away vpon the | 3 |
they divide the yeare | 3 |
which is all the | 3 |
to their order of | 3 |
in all their journyes | 3 |
but it may be | 3 |
those that were to | 3 |
tooke with him captaine | 3 |
with the king of | 3 |
forth her young ones | 3 |
an hundred and twentie | 3 |
whether they meane to | 3 |
admitted of the councell | 3 |
as high as a | 3 |
as if they had | 3 |
a petition presented to | 3 |
with wood and water | 3 |
of the bermuda company | 3 |
we found our selues | 3 |
to the right worshipfull | 3 |
shall be drawne out | 3 |
be of two sorts | 3 |
to the high court | 3 |
to suppresse the saluages | 3 |
of those severall colonies | 3 |
most part of them | 3 |
that some of them | 3 |
cut off his head | 3 |
proceedings of some independents | 3 |
in the church of | 3 |
the end of august | 3 |
ten or twelue daies | 3 |
two or three leagues | 3 |
hundred and fiftie men | 3 |
we could carry we | 3 |
with the happy arriuall | 3 |
which they make of | 3 |
and covered with a | 3 |
divided into sixe bookes | 3 |
and so eat it | 3 |
taketh the king of | 3 |
the most part in | 3 |
illustrations upon a petition | 3 |
according to their order | 3 |
and in many places | 3 |
in those countryes admirall | 3 |
a ship called the | 3 |
the arriuall of two | 3 |
the clocke in the | 3 |
now the third time | 3 |
of gold and silver | 3 |
against the parliament and | 3 |
of the lords supper | 3 |
if the party be | 3 |
with the temperature of | 3 |
the english in america | 3 |
that no person or | 3 |
in honour of our | 3 |
went their bowes and | 3 |
he had told them | 3 |
early in the morning | 3 |
according to their custome | 3 |
comprising severall most libellous | 3 |
their journyes and discoveries | 3 |
colonies and the accidents | 3 |
out of the earth | 3 |
to the lord la | 3 |
aptara keyed and coded | 3 |
kindly vsed by the | 3 |
in the same country | 3 |
their bow and arrowes | 3 |
for the east and | 3 |
and at the end | 3 |
drawne out with a | 3 |
three or foure houres | 3 |
the benefit of fishing | 3 |
the body of a | 3 |
the name of a | 3 |
worship of the church | 3 |
the master of the | 3 |
of three or foure | 3 |
be read in the | 3 |
of the four chiefest | 3 |
jurisdiction and power of | 3 |
or part of them | 3 |
in the least degree | 3 |
be friends with vs | 3 |
for the space of | 3 |
of the city of | 3 |
the petition of mr | 3 |
common good by william | 3 |
they set sayle from | 3 |
in some places a | 3 |
may be had by | 3 |
ship called the treasurer | 3 |
of the year is | 3 |
this with his owne | 3 |
with sir francis drake | 3 |
the power of those | 3 |
the iland of deuils | 3 |
to be one of | 3 |
some of them at | 3 |
bigger than a mans | 3 |
the most of their | 3 |
distresse in the iland | 3 |
you may reade in | 3 |
in the iland of | 3 |
sometymes governour in those | 3 |
of the first planters | 3 |
the riuer of chickahamania | 3 |
court of parliament for | 3 |
the ship called the | 3 |
and prejudice of that | 3 |
haue beene cast away | 3 |
the opposers of independent | 3 |
more then a thousand | 3 |
an hundred and twenty | 3 |
upon a petition presented | 3 |
is the cause that | 3 |
from tree to tree | 3 |
hole in the earth | 3 |
against the ordinance for | 3 |
to learne the language | 3 |
whence it s called | 3 |
not much to haue | 3 |
that befell them in | 3 |
which is made of | 3 |
but after a while | 3 |
good lord deliver me | 3 |
good by william prynne | 3 |
of a committee of | 3 |
all their journyes and | 3 |
in the county of | 3 |
they would not be | 3 |
the honourable the knights | 3 |
of the natives of | 3 |
and when they have | 3 |
on the east side | 3 |
castle in his owne | 3 |
on the easterne shore | 3 |
any other reformed church | 3 |
they were not able | 3 |
to his good behaviour | 3 |
and burgisses assembled in | 3 |
and an half in | 3 |
company to the matters | 3 |
one of the best | 3 |
what they could to | 3 |
so good a worke | 3 |
or any of them | 3 |
and when it is | 3 |
not ordained a minister | 3 |
bigger than our english | 3 |
heat of the sun | 3 |
they have from the | 3 |
against the church of | 3 |
church and common wealth | 3 |
on the north with | 3 |
nativity of sir iohn | 3 |
their distresse in the | 3 |
their conversion and holy | 3 |
as i haue said | 3 |
the shape of a | 3 |
the rate for more | 3 |
the euent of the | 3 |
of which there is | 3 |
the bark of trees | 3 |
the causes of our | 3 |
containing short illustrations upon | 3 |
you may see what | 3 |
was three quarters of | 3 |
not long after they | 3 |
foure or fiue hundred | 3 |
the army and kingdom | 3 |
lately sent from the | 3 |
well of fresh water | 3 |
generall historie of virginia | 3 |
government of this place | 3 |
of so great a | 3 |
you mean by conversion | 3 |
by the sea side | 3 |
the maner of their | 3 |
half in the diameter | 3 |
their servants and slaves | 3 |
of the people in | 3 |
also the maps and | 3 |
the natives of virginia | 3 |
if god had not | 3 |
day or two after | 3 |
we fell with the | 3 |
all his men were | 3 |
maps and descriptions of | 3 |
but if they be | 3 |
their wiues and children | 3 |
french men of warre | 3 |
in the feare of | 3 |
so much the more | 3 |
and thus it was | 3 |
each of them a | 3 |
such an abundance of | 3 |
sent from the sommer | 3 |
but the most part | 3 |
one hundred and twenty | 3 |
with their hands they | 3 |
bound to his good | 3 |
to the mercy of | 3 |
and temporall magistrates in | 3 |
some prodigious new wandring | 3 |
the space of one | 3 |
for england in the | 3 |
the master and his | 3 |
governours from their first | 3 |
volley of small shot | 3 |
with the names of | 3 |
with such small meanes | 3 |
and all sorts of | 3 |
and cause them to | 3 |
amongst a many of | 3 |
returned for england in | 3 |
the parliament and its | 3 |
on each side the | 3 |
all this time we | 3 |
citezens and burgisses assembled | 3 |
for a long time | 3 |
to come to the | 3 |
bermuda company to the | 3 |
there is a great | 3 |
opinion of captaine smith | 3 |
against the ecclesiasticall jurisdiction | 3 |
and this is the | 3 |
the power of parliaments | 3 |
them to iames towne | 3 |
his brother sir thomas | 2 |
they are taken with | 2 |
and his person out | 2 |
by the heat of | 2 |
and in the meane | 2 |
a number of good | 2 |
and to follow the | 2 |
put it into the | 2 |
them within the distance | 2 |
till they have made | 2 |
sir thomas dale and | 2 |
a very goodly bay | 2 |
the country thirty six | 2 |
is in the army | 2 |
that when they had | 2 |
being more willing to | 2 |
to the river of | 2 |
the vow and covenant | 2 |
till he found out | 2 |
of a strange shape | 2 |
and pleasant navigable rivers | 2 |
which is the most | 2 |
most parts of the | 2 |
many vollies of shot | 2 |
round in manner of | 2 |
bodies of the trees | 2 |
the one side was | 2 |
in a wooden platter | 2 |
a bag under her | 2 |
the censure of the | 2 |
iohn wright at christ | 2 |
much as any man | 2 |
the goodnesse and greatnesse | 2 |
and so i will | 2 |
ten or twelue of | 2 |
newports returne for england | 2 |
one of their skins | 2 |
so that in the | 2 |
or myles in breadth | 2 |
ships that went with | 2 |
and if by the | 2 |
to be put in | 2 |
the length of the | 2 |
of them one hundred | 2 |
but there are many | 2 |
in shape like our | 2 |
many of them would | 2 |
or to fetch it | 2 |
you may see in | 2 |
the vtmost of his | 2 |
they are also to | 2 |
but first to his | 2 |
myles of iames towne | 2 |
it is a great | 2 |
to the fort and | 2 |
may haue their fraught | 2 |
his wife and children | 2 |
for the preseruation of | 2 |
with a volley of | 2 |
before and after meat | 2 |
the relations of them | 2 |
unto the spirit of | 2 |
where his lodging is | 2 |
it seemes strange to | 2 |
as well haue beene | 2 |
we doe further order | 2 |
in a broad bay | 2 |
side of a young | 2 |
if you will grant | 2 |
all the rest to | 2 |
we came to hatorask | 2 |
to diuers of the | 2 |
of his maiesties priuy | 2 |
all the members of | 2 |
honourable committee of lords | 2 |
the want of a | 2 |
the people differ very | 2 |
one man and one | 2 |
the lords of his | 2 |
authority and jurisdiction of | 2 |
a peninsula on the | 2 |
they would not onely | 2 |
obedience to the civill | 2 |
if it had beene | 2 |
west side of this | 2 |
in this manner to | 2 |
that shall be drawne | 2 |
preaching in the army | 2 |
and in short time | 2 |
the wisdome and justice | 2 |
they are able to | 2 |
testimony of their true | 2 |
of the last times | 2 |
so that if you | 2 |
as many women as | 2 |
some part of it | 2 |
haue beene seene to | 2 |
are not such as | 2 |
they wash them in | 2 |
two more to his | 2 |
three miles from charles | 2 |
the heat of summer | 2 |
doubtlesse they can never | 2 |
and you shall find | 2 |
in holy convocation at | 2 |
surprized with a disease | 2 |
that a good dog | 2 |
went to the sea | 2 |
end of the tail | 2 |
what to doe with | 2 |
him to come to | 2 |
is most common is | 2 |
no more of the | 2 |
for the smoake to | 2 |
to the pope of | 2 |
are covered with a | 2 |
out their own shame | 2 |
colours that can be | 2 |
with foure and thirty | 2 |
faire well of fresh | 2 |
fell with the canaries | 2 |
and that as well | 2 |
might as well haue | 2 |
not the fruits of | 2 |
the immortality of the | 2 |
great and well proportioned | 2 |
the opinion of master | 2 |
invectives against the assembly | 2 |
for lands or goods | 2 |
discovery of the bay | 2 |
infidels children in the | 2 |
plantation of the english | 2 |
the first invention of | 2 |
from him to the | 2 |
a great chayne of | 2 |
betwixt the bay and | 2 |
of the governour and | 2 |
them to lay down | 2 |
would be pleased to | 2 |
wood that is most | 2 |
are either a bone | 2 |
which are very good | 2 |
to make a bed | 2 |
the difference of peace | 2 |
the wracke of sir | 2 |
the fruits of other | 2 |
such places where they | 2 |
the temper of the | 2 |
as it is said | 2 |
they sweat till they | 2 |
they are a very | 2 |
on these round about | 2 |
to the building of | 2 |
some question the truth | 2 |
after the arriuall of | 2 |
towards the end of | 2 |
copy of the petition | 2 |
year the weather is | 2 |
vpon the arriuall of | 2 |
in a manner wholly | 2 |
the apprehension of reverend | 2 |
the bishop of canterbury | 2 |
in the world for | 2 |
honour of our most | 2 |
which seem to be | 2 |
middles with a skin | 2 |
till he came to | 2 |
spared not the fruits | 2 |
a plantation in new | 2 |
other side the riuer | 2 |
hundreth penny of his | 2 |
discipline and forme of | 2 |
our most noble prince | 2 |
to keepe the king | 2 |
devils and antichrists invention | 2 |
and a halfe in | 2 |
some thirtie or fortie | 2 |
good of the colony | 2 |
till it be as | 2 |
they know not what | 2 |
are of divers natures | 2 |
of the independent church | 2 |
some of them two | 2 |
could see nothing but | 2 |
a year or two | 2 |
they all returned to | 2 |
place where they first | 2 |
is about a quarter | 2 |
plants from the west | 2 |
the third is a | 2 |
but not long after | 2 |
with their boats they | 2 |
upon which the fruit | 2 |
all the time of | 2 |
file of musqueteers to | 2 |
those in other countries | 2 |
fitter to be a | 2 |
of two dutch frigots | 2 |
sufficient to beat out | 2 |
bodies alter with their | 2 |
which was as followeth | 2 |
than they could be | 2 |
relation to queene anne | 2 |
at three shillings the | 2 |
hue and cry from | 2 |
to be apprehended by | 2 |
it for the spanyards | 2 |
chase them so long | 2 |
black and hard as | 2 |
for the one halfe | 2 |
they chase them so | 2 |
of tyranny and oppression | 2 |
suspecting as it was | 2 |
matters of religion and | 2 |
this away went their | 2 |
i think they have | 2 |
they were so ouer | 2 |
the assembly and presbytery | 2 |
and see if he | 2 |
if it be any | 2 |
of captaine george piercie | 2 |
nor euer did any | 2 |
be suddenly surprized with | 2 |
and honourable court of | 2 |
the three turkes heads | 2 |
as for the danger | 2 |
by him is commonly | 2 |
in such a case | 2 |
place to make salt | 2 |
may cause admiration in | 2 |
the ordinance of tythes | 2 |
it is therefore enacted | 2 |
so many as could | 2 |
each sent to build | 2 |
there is anchorage for | 2 |
for we heard no | 2 |
the earth together by | 2 |
the fault was his | 2 |
set saile for new | 2 |
that this act be | 2 |
also resist the truth | 2 |
third part of that | 2 |
then all the books | 2 |
deale with the salvages | 2 |
the nature of a | 2 |
the picture of a | 2 |
the discovery of monacan | 2 |
of you to goe | 2 |
haue all the amber | 2 |
desert places with their | 2 |
both small and great | 2 |
briefe relation of the | 2 |
by reason of those | 2 |
catechising all men and | 2 |
and continue till the | 2 |
the congregation in summer | 2 |
a good part of | 2 |
description of new england | 2 |
order of their court | 2 |
the people to mutiny | 2 |
as they are able | 2 |
to garbish their fish | 2 |
a copy of a | 2 |
the iudge of the | 2 |
in the hands of | 2 |
chappell to exercise in | 2 |
they brought him to | 2 |
where the woods are | 2 |
three hundred of them | 2 |
popes order for the | 2 |
be it further enacted | 2 |
of the chiefe priest | 2 |
first planted by the | 2 |
formerly baptized by others | 2 |
within the compasse of | 2 |
this little nauy royall | 2 |
attributing something to them | 2 |
and out of the | 2 |
out of the ground | 2 |
of these they make | 2 |
and made of the | 2 |
without the hazard of | 2 |
the synod is guided | 2 |
of the lord of | 2 |
thing i could perceiue | 2 |
makes a noise like | 2 |
did my best to | 2 |
captaine smith taken prisoner | 2 |
and most of them | 2 |
cast upon the sea | 2 |
obseruations of the hollanders | 2 |
land there is not | 2 |
a great many of | 2 |
the place of exercise | 2 |
was one of their | 2 |
darknesse is reserved for | 2 |
as yet i neuer | 2 |
last of this moneth | 2 |
out of his throne | 2 |
that ever breathed in | 2 |
with the french men | 2 |
temporall magistrates in generall | 2 |
be bound to pray | 2 |
to crosse the bay | 2 |
which is onely a | 2 |
conceive is a contradiction | 2 |
when a maid is | 2 |
in the absence of | 2 |
heads of the rivers | 2 |
and draw them to | 2 |
in some places they | 2 |
the comming in of | 2 |
we heard no more | 2 |
examples of the spaniards | 2 |
i beseech your honour | 2 |
they would doe the | 2 |
it is the most | 2 |
is a small root | 2 |
are found certain stones | 2 |
the same country at | 2 |
from the spanish wracke | 2 |
places with their families | 2 |
hath euer beene the | 2 |
or by all the | 2 |
and fifty pound weight | 2 |
of a pound of | 2 |
we could not finde | 2 |
printer to the reverend | 2 |
smith neare killed with | 2 |
of their powers and | 2 |
and none of them | 2 |
when the flowers are | 2 |
ghost sent in a | 2 |
with a good supply | 2 |
the governour is so | 2 |
with divers others to | 2 |
make of one tree | 2 |
the government of captaine | 2 |
the sentence of this | 2 |
out of the church | 2 |
to take away the | 2 |
for any thing else | 2 |
tooles of all sorts | 2 |
as well as the | 2 |
given him to raign | 2 |
she casts it forth | 2 |
that captaine smith would | 2 |
of the english plantations | 2 |
they set at their | 2 |
the priviledge of parliament | 2 |
by two or three | 2 |
their chiefe werowances came | 2 |
two foot and an | 2 |
to be seen in | 2 |
had got from the | 2 |
hazard of his life | 2 |
twelue pounds ten shillings | 2 |
and all along the | 2 |
their children from baptisme | 2 |
the inhabitants of the | 2 |
the strength of the | 2 |
in some of them | 2 |
of hogs and other | 2 |
should refuse to send | 2 |
and so set saile | 2 |
nourishing of all things | 2 |
offer to the company | 2 |
of our men being | 2 |
estc s this keyboarded | 2 |
where the saluages had | 2 |
by the maior part | 2 |
the vehemency of the | 2 |
the fashion of a | 2 |
in or over the | 2 |
and for euer be | 2 |
fathers the late lord | 2 |
of the word of | 2 |
to raign gloriously in | 2 |
possession of the country | 2 |
high as we could | 2 |
as also in a | 2 |
the same be it | 2 |
to be ready vpon | 2 |
being of so great | 2 |
at what rate they | 2 |
to make a little | 2 |
with the company for | 2 |
how to deale with | 2 |
a true relation of | 2 |
to kill the spirits | 2 |
most gallant that is | 2 |
if you will not | 2 |
and little slips of | 2 |
great houses filled with | 2 |
a fast for all | 2 |
they will row faster | 2 |
my purpose is not | 2 |
and if they would | 2 |
of a spanish wracke | 2 |
furnish them with all | 2 |
doe any thing to | 2 |
in the world within | 2 |
before the bishop of | 2 |
but vpon better consideration | 2 |
there is a cave | 2 |
on the south is | 2 |
at the top of | 2 |
their persons and liberties | 2 |
a briefe relation of | 2 |
one of these will | 2 |
and how they vse | 2 |
to the reverend assembly | 2 |
not to be eaten | 2 |
certain beast called a | 2 |
at a great charge | 2 |
which is of the | 2 |
haue done the like | 2 |
two or three inches | 2 |
the mangoags to search | 2 |
not long after a | 2 |
of a white colour | 2 |
which is the greatest | 2 |
and there for a | 2 |
universall catechising all men | 2 |
and the sea the | 2 |
much hurt by a | 2 |
make a fishing voyage | 2 |
parliament for redresse published | 2 |
told them they should | 2 |
to goe abroad with | 2 |
to the church of | 2 |
dayes and nights are | 2 |
which in ten dayes | 2 |
following we came to | 2 |
by authority of a | 2 |
was shot in his | 2 |
they begin to plant | 2 |
with such violence that | 2 |
in some good course | 2 |
affrica there is a | 2 |
his shop in toleration | 2 |
them all to their | 2 |
in all one hundred | 2 |
at the great end | 2 |
by the rocks before | 2 |
the fruit of the | 2 |
the building of the | 2 |
after a little conference | 2 |
two or three more | 2 |
but by reason of | 2 |
the midst of may | 2 |
carelesse of any thing | 2 |
or three inches long | 2 |
are much like ours | 2 |
are great store of | 2 |
not at the first | 2 |
was shot to death | 2 |
the vttermost of their | 2 |
dutch man of warre | 2 |
with great fear and | 2 |
to exercise the liberty | 2 |
of their head like | 2 |
to haue abandoned the | 2 |
to be set up | 2 |
and every his majesties | 2 |
hundred and twentie of | 2 |
put them in mind | 2 |
two miles and a | 2 |
not far from the | 2 |
and beset the fields | 2 |
in the height of | 2 |
when any of them | 2 |
he hath houses built | 2 |
be one of the | 2 |
for euer and euer | 2 |
it hath beene to | 2 |
most part in the | 2 |
in england in the | 2 |
in such a manner | 2 |
giue mee leaue to | 2 |
names we know not | 2 |
them so long within | 2 |
any other place in | 2 |
sent to discover the | 2 |
after some dayes imprisonment | 2 |
set sayle from england | 2 |
honourable houses of parliament | 2 |
corne to be planted | 2 |
the best he could | 2 |
whether it be not | 2 |
vsed by the people | 2 |
the beginning of trade | 2 |
but they hold all | 2 |
one of them came | 2 |
nor any of his | 2 |
no sooner was this | 2 |
court of parliament and | 2 |
loue you not me | 2 |
no place hath more | 2 |
it about his necke | 2 |
would take them to | 2 |
about the bignesse of | 2 |
which in england we | 2 |
it is hard if | 2 |
of the plantane is | 2 |
and establishing this their | 2 |
good of the colonie | 2 |
replenished with hens and | 2 |
came to visit him | 2 |
the parliament and company | 2 |
two shillings six pence | 2 |
the people the same | 2 |
never able to come | 2 |
in their temples they | 2 |
and if it be | 2 |
him or any of | 2 |
after the publishing hereof | 2 |
diuides it into many | 2 |
cold as in france | 2 |
not any thing at | 2 |
be put into a | 2 |
them in mats for | 2 |
the manner of a | 2 |
of the tree is | 2 |
the summer isles with | 2 |
opinion of our god | 2 |
is decreed and ordained | 2 |
the lord of hosts | 2 |
you may see at | 2 |
there are great store | 2 |
and to such places | 2 |
the yeare of our | 2 |
it with their meat | 2 |
if there be any | 2 |
no not so much | 2 |
ten myles from iames | 2 |
many of them haue | 2 |
the generall good of | 2 |
the watch was set | 2 |
and the cause of | 2 |
our king and countrey | 2 |
no manner of person | 2 |
many worthy members of | 2 |
a great difference betwixt | 2 |
the next day there | 2 |
with our english bodies | 2 |
all that would be | 2 |
and such as did | 2 |
like those of the | 2 |
they are rung out | 2 |
which gaue no lesse | 2 |
by a right line | 2 |
of them would haue | 2 |
had not taught vs | 2 |
estc r this keyboarded | 2 |
came to visit vs | 2 |
in may and iune | 2 |
in a manner as | 2 |
on his right hand | 2 |
as soon as it | 2 |
left to our fortunes | 2 |
pound of tobacco for | 2 |
would eate a bit | 2 |
and one hundred and | 2 |
by the power of | 2 |
for the prevention of | 2 |
many of them had | 2 |
written or preached against | 2 |
then a mile from | 2 |
conference with a saluage | 2 |
the affaires of virginia | 2 |
water to the thickness | 2 |
and in winter from | 2 |
a long yellow fruit | 2 |
it in the woods | 2 |
that none but their | 2 |
to goe to virginia | 2 |
infinite number of them | 2 |
present estate of that | 2 |
some three miles from | 2 |
canuas to make a | 2 |
clarke of the councell | 2 |
the country of indostan | 2 |
that they might be | 2 |
one of the three | 2 |
since the beginning of | 2 |
one of the most | 2 |
this they vse for | 2 |
they all know their | 2 |
a hundred of them | 2 |
good lord deliver us | 2 |
and the tops of | 2 |
stay in the iles | 2 |
most gracious prince charles | 2 |
hath beene in their | 2 |
pamphlets which were ever | 2 |
a faire well of | 2 |
hee was sent to | 2 |
and made a good | 2 |
bring them to their | 2 |
many other such like | 2 |
till it be like | 2 |
a strange increase of | 2 |
in point of conscience | 2 |
as he had beene | 2 |
stir up the people | 2 |
a mappe of the | 2 |
rebellion against the parliament | 2 |
to have their children | 2 |
halfe a pint of | 2 |
fly up into the | 2 |
they would set up | 2 |
to the peace and | 2 |
day of the assise | 2 |
mould two or three | 2 |
which is a great | 2 |
exceeding loue of the | 2 |
vp to the middles | 2 |
them as it were | 2 |
platter to wash his | 2 |
by the help of | 2 |
when all their fruits | 2 |
to be proceeded against | 2 |
the highest degree of | 2 |
to be seen a | 2 |
i humbly conceive is | 2 |
of gold and siluer | 2 |
and some of his | 2 |
of them that haue | 2 |
well wooded and watered | 2 |
the foure great men | 2 |
person out of his | 2 |
latter end of may | 2 |
and after their decease | 2 |
but the next day | 2 |
all parts of the | 2 |
so hard and tough | 2 |
unchristian passages against the | 2 |
the speed we could | 2 |
of men and beasts | 2 |
i shall give a | 2 |
the fraught of the | 2 |
he is in the | 2 |
and the relations of | 2 |
the safety of this | 2 |
one of my daughters | 2 |
of loue and peace | 2 |
till the next haruest | 2 |
two or three wives | 2 |
in the wayes of | 2 |
neere halfe a mile | 2 |
vse of our armes | 2 |
sort of bread which | 2 |
of a stammel colour | 2 |
his friend captaine iohn | 2 |
as it is with | 2 |
expounded by a minister | 2 |
order he could for | 2 |
the sign of the | 2 |
the commodities of the | 2 |
the wood that is | 2 |
there is a strange | 2 |
vs then supply vs | 2 |
that no manner of | 2 |
that he intended to | 2 |
there are two sorts | 2 |
the minister doth then | 2 |
for want of experience | 2 |
preach that is not | 2 |
of the christian magistrate | 2 |
heads and shoulders are | 2 |
within ten or twelue | 2 |
were landed in this | 2 |
euer be friends with | 2 |
them out of their | 2 |
what hath beene the | 2 |
in europe doth more | 2 |
of our most noble | 2 |
the assistance of the | 2 |
women and children do | 2 |
according to the order | 2 |
hazard of our lives | 2 |
our most royall king | 2 |
which might as well | 2 |
to deale with the | 2 |
covered with a great | 2 |
a ship and a | 2 |
to make them hardy | 2 |
in the woods and | 2 |
smiths offer to the | 2 |
and some the hand | 2 |
from the furie of | 2 |
to be solde by | 2 |
the ordinance of parliament | 2 |
and so the next | 2 |
right reverend father in | 2 |
in a long time | 2 |
of their chiefe werowances | 2 |
and when they were | 2 |
or any other place | 2 |
round about the house | 2 |
it pleased god he | 2 |
yard and a half | 2 |
of the island of | 2 |
the coldest mornings they | 2 |
separated from the admirall | 2 |
so long within that | 2 |
sent some of them | 2 |
most monstrous to behold | 2 |
with the end of | 2 |
arrived at iames towne | 2 |
againe to their owne | 2 |
long ere this haue | 2 |
it was but a | 2 |
it may be some | 2 |
as is formerly said | 2 |
the sword of the | 2 |
be published in all | 2 |
to be had for | 2 |
to know the cause | 2 |
the place where i | 2 |
other cattle according to | 2 |
it is decreed and | 2 |
from i le to | 2 |
of the common people | 2 |
in one place where | 2 |
and is very good | 2 |
they have plenty of | 2 |
splinter of a bone | 2 |
in the presence of | 2 |
touched with any sicknesse | 2 |
many other vexatious wayes | 2 |
but now they are | 2 |
was baptized by the | 2 |
it hath a good | 2 |
with the feare of | 2 |
those places where they | 2 |
yeeld obedience to the | 2 |
the gouernment left to | 2 |
the healthfulnesse of the | 2 |
that a man can | 2 |
was but onely to | 2 |
the manner was thus | 2 |
and will never be | 2 |
a few of the | 2 |
the governour and his | 2 |
guided by the holy | 2 |
in all the churches | 2 |
in the somer iles | 2 |
all such as are | 2 |
and therefore they call | 2 |
round as a ball | 2 |
men of corrupt mindes | 2 |
a wooden platter to | 2 |
hundred and fortie tuns | 2 |
is of the bignesse | 2 |
in a quarter of | 2 |
master scriveners voyage to | 2 |
prove the church of | 2 |
a tunable voice of | 2 |
of the english they | 2 |
to be paid when | 2 |
the church and people | 2 |
two foot and a | 2 |
liberty of their persons | 2 |
mind of their covenant | 2 |
they pipe as on | 2 |
in the same height | 2 |
hung it about his | 2 |
to be rid of | 2 |
it hath a long | 2 |
and plant our fields | 2 |
by the hazard of | 2 |
no lesse then a | 2 |
the english in virginia | 2 |
large and pleasant navigable | 2 |
is covered with a | 2 |
the holy ghost sent | 2 |
to the right honourable | 2 |
patents granted by his | 2 |
without any signe of | 2 |
in the place where | 2 |
they returned for england | 2 |
set up a new | 2 |
persons inhabiting within these | 2 |
at last they found | 2 |
all they haue to | 2 |
would i haue had | 2 |
according to their best | 2 |
seuen or eight hundred | 2 |
ordinance for tythes under | 2 |
signified vnto vs they | 2 |
there is plentie of | 2 |
and the people of | 2 |
the leaves are like | 2 |
the raigne of our | 2 |
the blanke that shall | 2 |
the fires they place | 2 |
of power and ability | 2 |
person or persons be | 2 |
to a place where | 2 |
their bows and arrows | 2 |
lords of his maiesties | 2 |
water beyond the mountaines | 2 |
the fruit is somewhat | 2 |
by sir walter raleigh | 2 |
should be friends with | 2 |
the councell to send | 2 |
foure good ships to | 2 |
good of their common | 2 |
be in the island | 2 |
raging waves of the | 2 |
have their children baptized | 2 |
several sorts of meat | 2 |
of sir george somers | 2 |
the ground was covered | 2 |
him so much as | 2 |
if he bid him | 2 |
top of this tree | 2 |
which was onely the | 2 |
of the third supply | 2 |
the accidents and proceedings | 2 |
though they had all | 2 |
which resembleth clay is | 2 |
is it fit that | 2 |
i have done more | 2 |
trials of new england | 2 |
and therefore must be | 2 |
into which they put | 2 |
the rocks before they | 2 |
the country is not | 2 |
enemies to the peace | 2 |
two or three little | 2 |
whom they call werowances | 2 |
as they are in | 2 |
there is a plant | 2 |
the language of powhatan | 2 |
assembly of divines and | 2 |
then for want of | 2 |
who have taken it | 2 |
for almost these two | 2 |
our most gracious prince | 2 |
a particular of such | 2 |
had at all of | 2 |
thrice in a night | 2 |
as it should haue | 2 |
his maiesty would please | 2 |
the right honourable henry | 2 |
great chayne of white | 2 |
to be had in | 2 |
so many of them | 2 |
committee for the american | 2 |
iohn farrar his deputy | 2 |
such abundance as is | 2 |
the loue i beare | 2 |
in the magazeen ship | 2 |
the shore to seeke | 2 |
by the power and | 2 |
liberty of their consciences | 2 |
of the devils and | 2 |
there are many other | 2 |
light of the gospel | 2 |
two spanish men of | 2 |
within fiue or six | 2 |
being one of the | 2 |
cause of the massacre | 2 |
for the destroying of | 2 |
to the honourable lords | 2 |
so many as they | 2 |
and every of them | 2 |
supply the necessities of | 2 |
be sold at his | 2 |
and the rest so | 2 |
we found two or | 2 |
but three or foure | 2 |