The Beginners of a Nation - Part 42
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Part 42

Cotton's Answer to Williams's Examination, 308, n. 10, 11; 310, n. 16; 313, n. 20, 21; Fountain of Life, 328, m.; Sermon on the Church's Resurrection, 331, m.; 334, m.; Way of Congregational Churches, 157, n. 2; 219, n. 10; 330, m.; 336, m.

Council for New England grants a patent to the Ma.s.sachusetts projectors, 199, 207.

Councilors of estate in Virginia, 55.

Counter-Blaste to Tobacco, 84, m.

Country, a barren, a great whet to industry, 177.

Courtier, the honor of a, possessed by Calvert, 223; the happiest has least to do at court, 258, n. 1.

Courts of High Commission, penalties of, 270.

Covenant of grace _vs._ covenant of works, 331, 334, 335.

c.o.x, Richard, followers of, dispute with those of John Knox, 105.

c.o.x's Literature of the Sabbath Question, 127, m.; 138, n. 8; 139, n. 10.

Cradock, Mathew, Governor of the Ma.s.sachusetts Company, proposes transfer of the government, 206, 208, 209; resigned his governorship, 210; denounced by Laud, 211; letter to Endecott, 216, n. 4.

Credulity about America, 2, 20; abyss of seventeenth century, 341.

Customs, low, advocated by Captain John Smith, 37.

Cyuile and Vncyuile Life, 134, n. 1.

Dainties, preachers who spread a table of, complained of, 328, 348, n. 5.

Dainty, Argall's voyage in the, 50.

Dale, Sir Thomas, sent to Virginia, 43; tyranny of, 45-47; horrible cruelties of, 46; services, 47; theatrical return, 48, 68, n. 10; glowing reports of the country, 49, 168; cruelties of, proved, 66, n. 9; his severity, 67, n. 9; various authorities on, 67, n. 9.

Danvers, Sir John, interested in the Virginia Company, 54; in power, 71, n. 17; one of the fathers of representative government in America, 173.

Darien, Isthmus of, 6.

Davenport, John, took part in the synod, 343; with his followers planted the New Haven colony, 343.

Days of the week, scruples about the heathen names of the, 302, 314, n. 23.

Days of fasting and prayer appointed, 324.

De Costa, in Mag. of Amer. Hist., 23, n. 8.

De la Warr, Lady, plundered by Argall, 50.

De la Warr, Lord, sends expedition for gold, 13; arrival of, regretted by the old settlers, 41; governor at Jamestown, 41; resides at the falls of the James, 43; flight of, from the colony, 43; nominally governor, 44; ceremonious landing at Jamestown, 101; escorted to church by gentlemen and guards, 102.

Deane, Charles, Voyages of Cabot, 21, n. 1; misunderstood a statement by Bradford, 184, n. 4.

Debate, the Puritan, 108; bitterness of the, 114; new issues, 123; advantage of new ground of, to the Puritan, 131.

Debates, theological, concerned with speculative dogmas, 108.

Declaration of Virginia, 95, n. 3.

Delft Haven, the parting at, 175.

Delusions in colony-planting, 74.

Deptford, gold-refining works at, 13.

De Rasieres's letter, 103, m.

Dermer, seeking the Pacific, is driven into Long Island Sound, 9.

Description of the Now-discovered river and Country of Virginia, 96, n. 7.

Desertion, Dale's punishment for, 46.

Devil worship, Indian, belief in, 16.

De Vries's Voyages, m., 231.

Dexter, F. B., in Winsor's Narrative and Critical History, 155, m.

Dexter's H. M., Congregationalism, 147, m.; 157, n. 1; 185, n. 6; "As to Roger Williams," as erudite as it is one-sided, 311, n. 17.

Discontent, numerous causes for, 111, 135, n. 5.

Discourse of the Old Virginia Company, 54, m.; 66, n. 9; 68, n. 11; 70, n. 16.

Discovery, the pinnace, 25.

Dispersions from the mother colony, 315.

Display, love of, in Elizabeth's time, 98; greatness declared itself by, 100, 134, n. 2.

Dissension, outbreak of, among the English Protestant exiles, 104.

Dividends, Dale's aim to make the colony pay, 45.

D'Ogeron supplied buccaneers with wives, 71, n. 18.

Dogs as food, 8.