Massachusetts Quarterly Review, 2 tomas |
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4 psl.
No external pressure of famine or political oppression can hold the Celts in Ireland together , or give them national unity of action enough to resist the Saxon foe . Doubtless in other days this very peculiarity of the Irish has done ...
No external pressure of famine or political oppression can hold the Celts in Ireland together , or give them national unity of action enough to resist the Saxon foe . Doubtless in other days this very peculiarity of the Irish has done ...
28 psl.
Ours is an aristocracy of wealth , not got by plunder , but by toil , thrift , enterprise ; of course it is a movable aristocracy : the first families of the last century are now forgot , and their successors will give place to new ...
Ours is an aristocracy of wealth , not got by plunder , but by toil , thrift , enterprise ; of course it is a movable aristocracy : the first families of the last century are now forgot , and their successors will give place to new ...
31 psl.
... which shall uplift the humblest , rudest , worst born child in all the land ; which shall bring forth and bring up noble men . An American State is a thing that must also be ; a State of freemen who give over brawling , resting on ...
... which shall uplift the humblest , rudest , worst born child in all the land ; which shall bring forth and bring up noble men . An American State is a thing that must also be ; a State of freemen who give over brawling , resting on ...
44 psl.
... to give his reasoning as the text of our comment . It should ever be borne in mind that litigation is rarely foreseen ; that it springs up unexpectedly ; that no one can foreknow and prepare in advance for the emergency .
... to give his reasoning as the text of our comment . It should ever be borne in mind that litigation is rarely foreseen ; that it springs up unexpectedly ; that no one can foreknow and prepare in advance for the emergency .
46 psl.
pp . 376 , 377 . Such are the reasons by which Mr. Greenleaf would justify the general doctrines of exclusion . They are fairly stated by him . They are all the law has to give . Are they well founded ?
pp . 376 , 377 . Such are the reasons by which Mr. Greenleaf would justify the general doctrines of exclusion . They are fairly stated by him . They are all the law has to give . Are they well founded ?
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according American animals appears beautiful become body called carry cause character Christian Church civilization common condition considered constitution continued diet effect England English established evidence existence fact feel force German give hand heart human hundred idea important individual influence interest Italy king land least less letters living look matter means mind moral nature never North Ocean once opinion original party pass perhaps persons political Prescott present princes principle question race reason received relation represented respect rule seems slave slavery soul South speak spirit suppose taken thing thou thought thousand tion true truth United universal whole witnesses write