France and England in North America (Vol. 1-7). Francis Parkman. Читать онлайн. Newlib. NEWLIB.NET

Автор: Francis Parkman
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XIV. 1636-1652.

       DEVOTEES AND NUNS.

       CHAPTER XV. 1636-1642.

       VILLEMARIE DE MONTREAL.

       CHAPTER XVI. 1641-1644.

       ISAAC JOGUES.

       CHAPTER XVII. 1641-1646.

       THE IROQUOIS—BRESSANI—DE NOUË.

       CHAPTER XVIII. 1642-1644.

       VILLEMARIE.

       CHAPTER XIX. 1644, 1645.

       PEACE.

       CHAPTER XX. 1645, 1646.

       THE PEACE BROKEN.

       CHAPTER XXI. 1646, 1647.

       ANOTHER WAR.

       CHAPTER XXII. 1645-1651.

       PRIEST AND PURITAN.

       CHAPTER XXIII. 1645-1648.

       A DOOMED NATION.

       CHAPTER XXIV. 1645-1648.

       THE HURON CHURCH.

       CHAPTER XXV. 1648, 1649.

       SAINTE MARIE.

       CHAPTER XXVI. 1648.

       ANTOINE DANIEL.

       CHAPTER XXVII. 1649.

       RUIN OF THE HURONS.

       CHAPTER XXVIII. 1649.

       THE MARTYRS.

       CHAPTER XXIX. 1649, 1650.

       THE SANCTUARY.

       CHAPTER XXX. 1649.

       GARNIER—CHABANEL.

       CHAPTER XXXI. 1650-1652.

       THE HURON MISSION ABANDONED.

       CHAPTER XXXII. 1650-1866.

       THE LAST OF THE HURONS.

       CHAPTER XXXIII. 1650-1670.

       THE DESTROYERS.

       CHAPTER XXXIV.

       THE END.

      PREFACE.

       Table of Contents

      Few passages of history are more striking than those which record the efforts of the earlier French Jesuits to convert the Indians. Full as they are of dramatic and philosophic interest, bearing strongly on the political destinies of America, and closely involved with the history of its native population, it is wonderful that they have been left so long in obscurity. While the infant colonies of England still clung feebly to the shores of the Atlantic, events deeply ominous to their future were in progress, unknown to them, in the very heart of the continent. It will be seen, in the sequel of this volume, that civil and religious liberty found strange allies in this Western World.

      These form but a part of the surviving writings of the French-American Jesuits. Many additional reports, memoirs, journals, and letters, official and private, have come down to us; some of which have recently been printed, while others remain in manuscript. Nearly every prominent actor in the scenes to be described has left his own record of events in which he bore part, in the shape of reports to his Superiors or letters to his friends.