        item: #1 of 5
          id: 10222
      author: Webb-Peploe, Mrs. (Annie)
       title: The Pilgrims of New England A Tale of the Early American Settlers
        date: None
       words: 122178
      flesch: 60
     summary: The whole party embarked safely, and were soon beyond the reach of the missiles which the Indians continued to discharge; and Maitland had the joy of seeing young Henrich speedily recover his senses, and his spirit too. Then, growing still bolder as they became excited, they drew their knives, and whetted them before the eyes of their hosts: flourishing them round their heads, and boasting how they had already shed the blood of many white men in the distant European settlements.
    keywords: boy; brother; chief; child; christian; coubitant; day; death; deep; edith; english; eyes; father; feelings; friend; god; ground; hand; heart; henrich; home; hope; indian; jyanough; land; life; little; man; men; mind; mother; new; oriana; party; place; plymouth; power; rest; return; rodolph; roger; sachem; saw; settlement; settlers; son; spirit; time; tisquantum; tribe; village; warriors; way; white; wife; wild; young
       cache: 10222.txt
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        item: #2 of 5
          id: 27357
      author: Carlton, Henry Fisk
       title: The Landing of the Pilgrims
        date: None
       words: 5091
      flesch: 89
     summary: KIEFT May I come aboard? JONES Come aboard. JONES Well-- KIEFT
    keywords: carver; company; jones; kieft; land; robinson
       cache: 27357.txt
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        item: #3 of 5
          id: 36756
      author: Addison, A. C. (Albert Christopher)
       title: The Romantic Story of the Mayflower Pilgrims, and Its Place in the Life of To-day
        date: None
       words: 22947
      flesch: 63
     summary: Church 9 The Cottage at Austerfield where William Bradford was born 13 The Old Hall, Gainsborough, in which the Separatist Church was founded in 1602 17 Guildhall and South Street, Boston 21 The Old Courtroom, Guildhall, Boston 25 The River Witham, Boston 29 The Pilgrim Cells, Guildhall, Boston, showing the Kitchen beyond 33 Old Town Gaol, Market-place, Boston 37 Trentside, Gainsborough 41 Elder William Brewster 45 John Robinson's House, Leyden, where the Pilgrim Fathers worshipped 49 St. Peter's Church, Leyden 53 Bust of Captain John Smith 57 The Embarkation of the Pilgrims 61 Model of the Mayflower 65 Plymouth Harbour, as seen from Cole's Hill 69 The Landing of the Pilgrims 73 The March of Miles Standish 77 The Canopy over Plymouth Rock 81 The Old Fort and First Meeting-House 85 Pilgrims going to Church 89 The Departure of the Mayflower 93 Captain Miles Standish 97 Governor William Bradford 101 The Pilgrim Memorial Monument at Provincetown 105 Plymouth Rock 109 A Bit of Old Boston 113 The Site of the Old Fort, Burial Hill, Plymouth 117 First Church, Plymouth 121 The Pilgrim Fathers' Memorial, Plymouth 125 John Alden.--Priscilla Mullins 129 Governor Bradford's Monument, Burial Hill, Plymouth 133 Governor Carver's Chair and Ancient Spinning Wheel 137 Elder Brewster's Chair and the Cradle of Peregrine White 141 The Grave of John Howland 145 The Grave of Miles Standish, Duxbury 149 The Miles Standish Monument, Duxbury 153 Governor Edward Winslow 157 Mayflower Tablet on the Barbican, Plymouth, England 161 Scrooby Village 165 The Ancient Kitchen, Guildhall, Boston 169 Robinson Memorial Church, Gainsborough 173 Tablet in Vestibule of Robinson Memorial Church, Gainsborough.--Memorial Tablet on St. Peter's Church, Leyden 177 Design by R. M. Lucas for the Tercentenary Memorial at Southampton 181 The Font, Austerfield Church.--The Font, Primitive Methodist Chapel, Lound 185 PREFACE By a strange yet happy coincidence, on the very day the writer of these lines sat silent in a Pilgrim cell at Boston--the Lincolnshire town where the Pilgrims were imprisoned in their first attempt to flee their native country--pondering on the past and inscribing his humble lines to the New World pioneers, the President of the American Republic was at Provincetown, Massachusetts, dedicating a giant monument to the planters of New Plymouth, the last of the many memorials erected to them. Here was the first rude break in their weary worldly progress, a journey which was to continue with affliction into Holland, thence back to Plymouth, and, after a last adieu there to English soil, on in the little Mayflower to New Plymouth and a New England.
    keywords: boston; bradford; brewster; burbank; church; colony; day; england; fathers; gainsborough; governor; history; illustration; john; leyden; mayflower; memorial; men; miles; new; photograph; pilgrim; place; plymouth; robinson; scrooby; standish; time; town; wife; william; world; years
       cache: 36756.txt
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        item: #4 of 5
          id: 44616
      author: Otis, James
       title: Mary of Plymouth: A Story of the Pilgrim Settlement
        date: None
       words: 29133
      flesch: 67
     summary: You must not believe that we drank milk freely, as do you at Scrooby, for there are many people in Plymouth, all of whom had been hungering for it even as had Sarah and I. Father claimed that each must have a certain share, therefore it is a great feast day with us when we have a large spoonful on our pudding, or to drink. There were many times when Sarah and I were so hungry that we cried, with our arms around each other's neck, as if being so close together would still the terrible feeling in our stomachs.
    keywords: bradford; brewster; captain; children; day; england; father; food; governor; home; house; illustration; master; men; mother; new; people; plymouth; sarah; standish; time; village
       cache: 44616.txt
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        item: #5 of 5
          id: 62684
      author: Munroe, Kirk
       title: The Belt of Seven Totems: A Story of Massasoit
        date: None
       words: 58952
      flesch: 76
     summary: Not only did this dreadful sound nearly paralyze poor Nahma, but it so terrified a small party of Indians who were trading within the fort that they rushed from it in dismay, took to their canoes, and paddled off with all speed. By that shrewd Indian the apparently meaningless words repeated by Nahma during his illness had been conjectured to belong to the vocabulary of white men, and he had said as much to his young guest.
    keywords: bear; beaver; belt; canoe; country; day; eyes; face; fire; forest; hand; hurons; indian; iroquois; kaweras; land; life; little; lodge; longfeather; man; massasoit; men; miantinomo; moment; nahma; new; night; people; place; river; sacandaga; ship; son; tasquanto; things; time; water; way; white; young; youth
       cache: 62684.txt
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