Massachusetts Quarterly Review, 3 tomasCoolidge & Wiley, 1849 J.R. Lowell's review of Thoreau's A Week on the Concord and Merrimack Rivers is in v. 3, p. 40-51 (Dec. 1849). |
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16 psl.
... South has full power to defend successfully any of her institutions against all opposers , has not forgotten to do what the most chivalrous slaveholders will do , when they deem it necessary , " eke out the lion's skin with the fox's ...
... South has full power to defend successfully any of her institutions against all opposers , has not forgotten to do what the most chivalrous slaveholders will do , when they deem it necessary , " eke out the lion's skin with the fox's ...
21 psl.
... South , and the uncompro- mising opponents of it at the North " geographical factions , " and saying that the war between them and the bill was a war of extermination - that they do not desire any thing that would tranquillize the ...
... South , and the uncompro- mising opponents of it at the North " geographical factions , " and saying that the war between them and the bill was a war of extermination - that they do not desire any thing that would tranquillize the ...
29 psl.
... South can " & c . .. " The Court derives its power to de- cide the question not from the bill but from the Constitution . " " Neither Northern nor Southern men will pretend , for one moment , that this great question , which threatens ...
... South can " & c . .. " The Court derives its power to de- cide the question not from the bill but from the Constitution . " " Neither Northern nor Southern men will pretend , for one moment , that this great question , which threatens ...
34 psl.
... south of Mason and Dixon's line , is unworthy of a statesman . It is not denied that a man may be as honest , if he live on the one side of the line as on the other . " " The man who can in his heart believe that five judges would ...
... south of Mason and Dixon's line , is unworthy of a statesman . It is not denied that a man may be as honest , if he live on the one side of the line as on the other . " " The man who can in his heart believe that five judges would ...
36 psl.
... South ; if uncon- stitutional , they will be called abolitionists there , be rendered odious among the slaveholders , and find it next to impossible , may we not say impossible , to reside among them , as they now do ? Does he not know ...
... South ; if uncon- stitutional , they will be called abolitionists there , be rendered odious among the slaveholders , and find it next to impossible , may we not say impossible , to reside among them , as they now do ? Does he not know ...
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