An American history . arly Englishand French Voyagers (Orig. Narr.); A. B. Hart, American History toldby Contemporaries, Vol. I, Nos. 21-35 ! Edw. Channing, History ofthe United States, Vol. I, chaps, iii-v; L. Ferrand, Basis of (Am. Nation), chaps, v-xvii. TOPICS FOR SPECIAL REPORTS 1. Geographical Knowledge before Columbus: Winsor, Vol. I, pp. 1-33;Fiske, Vol. I, pp. 256-294; Cheyney, pp. 41-78. 2. Columbuss First Voyage: Olson and Bourne (Orig. Narr.),pp. 89-258 (Columbuss journal); Fiske, Vol. I, pp. 419-446; OldSouth Leaflets, Nos. 29 and 33 (descriptions of voyage by Col
An American history . arly Englishand French Voyagers (Orig. Narr.); A. B. Hart, American History toldby Contemporaries, Vol. I, Nos. 21-35 ! Edw. Channing, History ofthe United States, Vol. I, chaps, iii-v; L. Ferrand, Basis of (Am. Nation), chaps, v-xvii. TOPICS FOR SPECIAL REPORTS 1. Geographical Knowledge before Columbus: Winsor, Vol. I, pp. 1-33;Fiske, Vol. I, pp. 256-294; Cheyney, pp. 41-78. 2. Columbuss First Voyage: Olson and Bourne (Orig. Narr.),pp. 89-258 (Columbuss journal); Fiske, Vol. I, pp. 419-446; OldSouth Leaflets, Nos. 29 and 33 (descriptions of voyage by Columbus andby his son). 3. De Sotos Journey to the Mississippi: Hodge and Lewis (), pp. 129-272; Bourne, pp. 162-170; Winsor, Vol. II, pp. 244-254. 4. Raleighs Attempts to found a Colony in Virginia : Burrage (), pp. 225-323; Hart, No. 32; Winsor, Vol. Ill, pp. 105-116;Old South Leaflets, Nos. 92, 119. 5. The American Indians: Fiske, Vol. I, pp. 38-147; Farrand,pp. 195-271; Hart, Nos. 21, 60, 64, CHAPTER IIthe english colonies . The Old Dominion Queen Elizabeths long and glorious reign came to an end 31. Expiora-in 1603, when she was succeeded on the throne of England by ae™nteenthJames Stuart of Scotland,^ son of her ill-fated cousin and rival, centuryMary Queen of Scots. With the Age of Elizabeth there passedalso the age of romance and chivalry. The gorgeous dreams oftreasure and empire which filled the minds of the explorers ofthe sixteenth century faded into the sober realization of thehardships involved in settling the wild and distant regions of theNew World. True, the search for gold and for the northwestpassage to the Indies, the plans for the wholesale conversionof the Indians, and the erection of splendid kingdoms in theheart of America still lingered on into the seventeenth cen-tury and died slowly. But these ideas lingered only; they werenot, as earlier, the spring and motive of the expeditions toAmerica. To them succeeded the study of the s
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