Brownson's Quarterly Review, 1 tomasOrestes Augustus Brownson Benjamin H. Greene, 1864 |
Knygos viduje
Rezultatai 1–3 iš 84
10 psl.
... adopted the American Idea , not men in whom it was born , and whose inmost life it informs . Entertaining the firm conviction that either slavery or the nation must perish , that all attempts at compromise between the two inherently ...
... adopted the American Idea , not men in whom it was born , and whose inmost life it informs . Entertaining the firm conviction that either slavery or the nation must perish , that all attempts at compromise between the two inherently ...
22 psl.
... adopted by the people . Whether the Anglo - American people were really one nation or not prior to the adoption of the Constitution , was to them a matter of no consequence , because they regarded as the constitution only the written ...
... adopted by the people . Whether the Anglo - American people were really one nation or not prior to the adoption of the Constitution , was to them a matter of no consequence , because they regarded as the constitution only the written ...
242 psl.
... adopted , or rather , threatened to be adopted , General McClellan or any other officer refused to obey , on that ground , any military order given him . We do not be- lieve that there were then any political reasons of real weight for ...
... adopted , or rather , threatened to be adopted , General McClellan or any other officer refused to obey , on that ground , any military order given him . We do not be- lieve that there were then any political reasons of real weight for ...
Turinys
NUMBER | 1 |
THE PRESIDENTS MESSAGE AND PROCLAMATION | 85 |
GENERAL HALLECKS REPORT | 112 |
Nerodoma skirsnių: 15
Kiti leidimai - Peržiūrėti viską
Pagrindiniai terminai ir frazės
Abolitionists Abraham Lincoln Administration adopted American anti-slavery army Articles of Confederation assert authority believe Catholic Christian Church citizens civil command Congress Constitution Convention copula democracy Democratic Democratic party deny divine doctrine doubt duty election emancipation equal existence fact faith favor Federal Fitz John Porter freedom Frémont friends Gioberti give Hence hold honor human idea independent intelligible intuition Italian Jesuits judgment La Civiltà Cattolica liberty Lincoln loyal martial law McClellan ment military mind moral nation nature negro never object organization ourselves pantheism party patriotic peace philosophy political population and territory President principles Proclamation prove question re-election reason Rebellion Rebels religion Republic Republican Republican party respect seceded secession sense sentiment simply slavery slaves society soul Southern sovereign sovereignty spirit superintelligible suppose theory thing tion truth understand Union United unity vote War Democrat