Vietnam or Thailand ? Vote for the TOP Country of the Week !

Updated: June 9, 2025


June no Yengeese, June Tuscarora got Tuscarora husband Tuscarora heart Tuscarora feeling all over Tuscarora. Lily wouldn't run and tell French that her fader was coming to gain victory?" "Perhaps not," returned Mabel, pressing a hand on a brain that felt bewildered, "perhaps not; but you serve me, aid me have saved me, June! Why have you done this, if you only feel as a Tuscarora?"

"To-night your people are feasting; what do they intend to do to-morrow?" "Don't know; afraid to see Arrowhead, afraid to ask question; t'ink hide away till Yengeese come back." "Will they not attempt anything against the blockhouse? You have seen what they can threaten if they will." "Too much rum. Arrowhead sleep, or no dare; French captain gone away, or no dare. All go to sleep now."

He was watched in all his movements by Heyward, who, however, remained firm, still folding the fragile form of Alice to his heart, at once too proud and too hopeless to ask favor of an enemy so often foiled. When Magua had effected his object he approached his prisoners, and said in English: "The pale faces trap the cunning beavers; but the red-skins know how to take the Yengeese."

Observing Tamenund to look about him doubtingly, one of his companions said: "It is a snake a red-skin in the pay of the Yengeese. We keep him for the torture." "Let him come," returned the sage.

For ourselves, now, we do not entertain a doubt that the sobriquet of "Yankees" which is in every man's mouth, and of which the derivation appears to puzzle all our philologists, is nothing but a slight corruption of the word "Yengeese," the term applied to the "English," by the tribes to whom they first became known.

His conquerors maintained the decorous gravity with which an Indian always listens to the speech of another, until he had ended; and then the Great Chief, or Wampanoag, as he had proclaimed himself to be, laid a finger lightly on the shoulder of his prisoner, as he demanded "Why have the people of the Yengeese lost themselves on a blind path?

"Let the arms of the warriors rest, till they meet the armed hands of the Yengeese, or they will be too tired to strike heavily. My young men have taken scalps, since the sun came over the trees, and they are satisfied Why does Metacom look so hard? What does my father see?" "A dark spot in the middle of a white plain. The grass is not green; it is red as blood.

" repeated Wah-ta-Wah, returning the smile of Hetty, in her own gentle, winning, manner "wicked warrior that-a-way good warrior, far off." "What's your name?" asked Hetty, with the simplicity of a child. "Wah-ta-Wah. I no Mingo good Delaware Yengeese friend. Mingo cruel, and love scalp, for blood Delaware love him, for honor. Come here, where no eyes."

He sees the warriors of the Yengeese coming into his village, murdering his old women, and slaying the Narragansett girls; killing his warriors from behind, and lighting their fires with the bones of red men. I will now stop my ears, for the groans of the slaughtered make my soul feel weak."

"The land of the Yengeese is then good very good," returned Philip; "but their young men like one that is better." "Thy nature, Wampanoag, is not equal to comprehend the motives which have led us hither, and our discourse is getting vain." "My brother Conanchet is a Sachem. The leaves that fall from the trees of his country, in the season of frosts, blow into my hunting-grounds.

Word Of The Day

dummie's

Others Looking