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Updated: June 12, 2025


First they planted a cross; then they began their labors, and with their labors their quarrels. La Saussaye, zealous for agriculture, wished to break ground and raise crops immediately; the rest opposed him, wishing first to be housed and fortified. Fleury demanded that the ship should be unladen, and La Saussaye would not consent.

Argall asked for the commander, but La Saussaye had fled to the woods. The crafty Englishman seized his chests, caused the locks to be picked, searched till he found the royal letters and commissions, withdrew them, replaced everything else as he had found it, and again closed the lids.

Argall's men prepared for fight, while their Indian guide, amazed, broke into a howl of lamentation. On shore all was confusion. Bailleul, the pilot, went to reconnoitre, and ended by hiding among the islands. La Saussaye lost presence of mind, and did nothing for defence.

Argall's ship, the captured ship of La Saussaye, and another smaller vessel, were at once equipped and despatched on their errand of havoc. Argall commanded; and Biard, with Quentin and several others of the prisoners, were embarked with him. They shaped their course first for Mount Desert.

Also The Notions of the Chinese concerning God and Spirits, 1852. The best account of the old State Religion is that of J. H. Plath, Die Religion und der Cultus der alten Chinesen, 1862. Réville, La Religion chinoise . The third volume of his History. R. K. Douglas, Confucianism and Taoism, 1876. De Groot, in De la Saussaye. De Groot, The Religious System of China, vols. i.-iv., 1892-1901.

Tiele's Egyptische en Mesopotamische Godsdiensten. The Histories of Israel, especially Kuenen, The Religion of Israel. F. Jeremias, in De la Saussaye, vol. i. pp. 348-383. E. Meyer, "Phenicia," in Encyclopædia Biblica. It is a circumstance of the greatest value for the science of religion that the Old Testament is so well known.

Jastrow, "On the Religion of the Semites," in Oxford Proceedings, vol. i. p. 225, sqq. F. Jeremias in De la Saussaye, pp. 246-347. Bezold, Niniva and Babylon, 1903. E. H. W. Johns, The Oldest Code of Laws in the World, 1903. "On the Code of Hammurabi." E. H. W. Johns, in Dictionary of the Bible, vol. v.

On the classification of Religions see Tiele's article on "Religion" in the Encyclopædia Britannica, Ninth Edition. Alb. Reville, Lectures on the Origin and Growth of Religion as illustrated by the Native Religions of Mexico and Peru. Hibbert Lectures, 1884. De la Saussaye, Third Edition, pp. 5-16, gives a good conspectus of the various classifications which have been proposed.

Argall, severely buffeted, reached his port in safety, having first, it is said, compelled the Dutch at Manhattan to acknowledge for a time the sovereignty of King James. The captured ship of La Saussaye, with Biard and his colleague Quentin on board, was forced to yield to the fury of the western gales and bear away for the Azores. To Biard the change of destination was not unwelcome.

La Saussaye cast anchor not far from Schooner Head, and here he lay till evening.

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