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" It was then considered as the extinction of a virulent and implacable enemy ; it is now viewed as the fall of a great warrior, a penetrating statesman, and a mighty prince. It then excited universal joy and congratulation, as a prelude to the close of... "
Select Reviews, and Spirit of the Foreign Magazines - Page 256
edited by - 1810
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A History of New England: Containing Historical and Descriptive Sketches of ...

R. H. Howard, Henry E. Crocker - 1879 - 512 pages
...lots," subject at any time to the disposal of a majority of the proprietors, and the proaboriginal race and the inscrutable decrees of Heaven. The patriotism of the man was then overlooked in tho cruelty of the savage, and little allowance was made for the natural jealousy of the prince, on...
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The History of Massachusetts, from the Landing of the Pilgrims to the ...

George Lowell Austin - 1884 - 686 pages
...statesman, and a mighty prince. It then excited universal joy and congratulation, as a prelude to the close of a merciless war ; it now awakens sober reflections...the sovereign on account of the barbarities of the warrior. Philip, in the progress of the English settlements, foresaw the loss of his territory, and...
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History of Northampton, Massachusetts, from Its Settlement in 1654, Volume 1

James Russell Trumbull - 1898 - 668 pages
...statesman, and a mighty prince. It then excited universal joy and congratulation, as a prelude to the close of a merciless war; it now awakens sober reflections...aboriginal race, and the inscrutable decrees of heaven."— Holmes' Annals of America, vol. 1, p. 383, pub. in 1829. " Philip was unquestionably a great warrior...
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The Quarterly Review, Volume 2

William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, Sir William Smith, John Murray, Rowland Edmund Prothero Baron Ernle, George Walter Prothero - 1809 - 498 pages
...statesman and a mighty prince. It then excited universal joy and congratulation as a prelude to the close of a merciless war : it now awakens sober reflections...the sovereign, on account of the barbarities of the warrior.' Whenever America produce* a Homer, this must ~tfe~'tne' 'subject of his poem. ' In this....
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