Researches , No. XXIII, pp.
— from The Travels of Marco Polo — Volume 1 by Rustichello of Pisa
Pickens , Gen. Andrew , expeditions against Cherokees under 59 , 60 Pickens , Gen. Andrew , home of, at Hopewell 211 Pickens , Gen. Andrew on Shaw’s missions 71 Pickens , Gen. Andrew , signing of treaty by 61 Pickering on Cherokee chief among Seneca 353 Pickett on Creek war 90 – 93 , 96 Pickett on defeat of D’Artaguette 477 Pickett on De Soto’s route 193 , 195 , 196 , 197 , 198 – 199 Pickett on Fort Mims massacre 216 Pickett on Chief McGillivray 210 Pickett on Chief Weatherford 217 Pigeon , myth concerning 280 Pike , Gen. Albert , treaty negotiated, by 148 Pilling, James , on Cherokee literature 112 Pilling, James on Cherokee schoolbooks 151 Pilling, James on Cherokee syllabary 110 , 220 Pilling, James on Jones and Warlord 108 Pilling, James on translation of New Testament 111 Pilling, James on Rev. S. A. Worcester 108 , 148 , 218 Pilot knob , myths concerning 330 , 341 – 342 , 343 – 345 , 480 – 481 Pinckney on Cherokee attitude in war of 1812 89 Pinedale , collection from ruins near xxi Pinedale , excavation of ruins near xvi Pine knots , Cherokee use of, as torches 492 Pin Indians , see Ketoowah society .
— from Myths of the Cherokee Extract from the Nineteenth Annual Report of the Bureau of American Ethnology by James Mooney
240 No. XIII Privileges and Immunities granted to the Printers of Calico and Inhabitants of the Town of Great Akola in Mewar.
— from Annals and Antiquities of Rajasthan, v. 1 of 3 or the Central and Western Rajput States of India by James Tod
It has been said that this poem was founded on the old Scotch ballad "The Twa Sisters" (see for that ballad Sharpe's Ballad Book , No. x., p. 30), but there is no resemblance at all between the ballad and this poem beyond the fact that in each there are two sisters who are both loved by a certain squire, the elder in jealousy pushing the younger into a river and drowning her.
— from The Early Poems of Alfred Lord Tennyson by Tennyson, Alfred Tennyson, Baron
Written by the Chaudhari Bhopji, and engraved by the stonecutter Bhima. S. 1856 ( A.D. 1800) No. XIV Prohibition against Guests carrying away Provisions from the Public Feast.
— from Annals and Antiquities of Rajasthan, v. 1 of 3 or the Central and Western Rajput States of India by James Tod
To the north, Xerxes passed over to Sestos on his bridge of boats, B.C. 480.
— from The Natural History of Pliny, Volume 1 (of 6) by the Elder Pliny
The plate of Blake's No. XI, p. 148 [Transcribers Note: Plate XXXII ], reproduced here, is also a good example.
— from The Practice and Science of Drawing by Harold Speed
We are now held responsible for our actions; our old guardians, the gods and demi-gods of our youth, the superstitions and fears of our childhood, withdraw; the field lies open before us; we lived through our morning with but one master—chance—; let us see to it that we MAKE our afternoon our own (see Note XLIX., Part III.).
— from Thus Spake Zarathustra: A Book for All and None by Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche
C.A.J. Skeel (S.P.C.K. Texts for Students , No. XI), p. 48.
— from Medieval People by Eileen Power
10 ff. below), and those of the ship Leiden (No. XV, p. 49).]
— from The Part Borne by the Dutch in the Discovery of Australia 1606-1765 by J. E. (Jan Ernst) Heeres
Swami Vivekananda : Addresses, No. XII., Practical Vedanta, part iv.
— from The Varieties of Religious Experience: A Study in Human Nature by William James
x Q were true, then every particular assertion of the form AP * AQ, would not only be true, but would be an instance of a true formal implication (namely " x P *
— from Philosophical Studies by G. E. (George Edward) Moore
On this point see also the documents of PELSAERT'S shipwreck (No. XXIII, pp.
— from The Part Borne by the Dutch in the Discovery of Australia 1606-1765 by J. E. (Jan Ernst) Heeres
Note XII ., page 130 .
— from Theism; being the Baird Lecture of 1876 by Robert Flint
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