New-Englands Memoriall: or, A brief relation of the most memorable and remarkable passages of the providence of God, manifested to the planters of New-England in America; : with special reference to the first colony thereof, called New-Plimouth: As also a nomination of divers of the most eminent instruments deceased, both of church and common-wealth, improved in the first beginning and after-progress of sundry of the respective jurisdictions in those parts; in reference unto sundry exemplary passages of their lives, and the time of their death/ Published for the use and benefit of present and


New-Englands Memoriall: or, A brief relation of the most memorable and remarkable passages of the providence of God, manifested to the planters of New-England in America; : with special reference to the first colony thereof, called New-Plimouth: As also a nomination of divers of the most eminent instruments deceased, both of church and common-wealth, improved in the first beginning and after-progress of sundry of the respective jurisdictions in those parts; in reference unto sundry exemplary passages of their lives, and the time of their death/ Published for the use and benefit of present and future generations, by Nathaniel Morton, secretary to the court for the jurisdiction of New-Plimouth; [Six lines of Scripture texts]. . m out of the Bay under fail, and fo camehome, not taking the worth of a peny of any of them. This was the end of thefe that fometimes boafted of their *ftrength, being all able, My men, and what they would do andbring to pafs, in comparison of the people at Plimouth, whohad >many Women and Children, and weak ones • and faid at theirfirft arrival, when they faw the wants at Plimouth, That they fa thVtoyJd take another ccurfe, and not fall into fmh a condition as this effcti of Prifimfle people -were ceme to: but a mans way is not in his ownpower, God can make the weak to ft and ; Let him thttt thinhethh fiandetb (in fuch refpe&as well as other) take heed left hefall, i Shortly after Mr. wefion came over with fome of the Fiflier-men,, where he heard of the Ruine of his Plantation, and go*a Boat, and with a man or two came to fee how things were,jj ^ut by the way (for want of skill) in a Storm he caft away hBBoat in the bottome of the Bay, between Merrimack^ antG z Pafctitaqvt j. Uhisfirft De-cade, New-Eng lands MemonalL An. 1623. Pafcataqua, and hardly efcaped with life • and afterward*-fellinto the hands of the Indians, who pillaged him of all that heladfaved from the Sea, and Gripped him of all his Clothes tohis Shirt At laft he g


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