Massachusetts Quarterly Review, 2 tomasCoolidge & Wiley, 1849 |
Knygos viduje
Rezultatai 6–10 iš 67
38 psl.
... feel satisfied that the more it is discussed , the plainer it will become that the only law upon which slavery rests is the lynch law of force and violence . We deny altogether that the states of this union have or ever had any power to ...
... feel satisfied that the more it is discussed , the plainer it will become that the only law upon which slavery rests is the lynch law of force and violence . We deny altogether that the states of this union have or ever had any power to ...
56 psl.
... feeling his position as one looked upon with suspicion , he will be likely to guard his testimony . Besides , if both parties are heard , the perjury of one is known to the other . Will one be so very likely to commit this offence in ...
... feeling his position as one looked upon with suspicion , he will be likely to guard his testimony . Besides , if both parties are heard , the perjury of one is known to the other . Will one be so very likely to commit this offence in ...
57 psl.
... feel unpleasantly ; lest scrutinizing interrogatories should disturb the repose of fraud , or bring dismay and terror to guilt . The hardship incident to the utterance of the truth , - - and to being compelled in consequence thereof to ...
... feel unpleasantly ; lest scrutinizing interrogatories should disturb the repose of fraud , or bring dismay and terror to guilt . The hardship incident to the utterance of the truth , - - and to being compelled in consequence thereof to ...
65 psl.
... feel it in whatever they say or do , but it is bet ter than their speech or deed , and can be conceived of apart from these . It is his own conceptions of the characters of different personages that Landor brings in as interlocutors ...
... feel it in whatever they say or do , but it is bet ter than their speech or deed , and can be conceived of apart from these . It is his own conceptions of the characters of different personages that Landor brings in as interlocutors ...
66 psl.
... feel that it is he who is speaking , and that he has merely chosen a character whom he considered suitable to express a particular phase of his own mind . He never , for a moment , loses himself in his characters . He is never raised or ...
... feel that it is he who is speaking , and that he has merely chosen a character whom he considered suitable to express a particular phase of his own mind . He never , for a moment , loses himself in his characters . He is never raised or ...
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American animals appears beautiful Boston called character Christian Church civilization coast common constitution Cortés diet Dighton rock doctrine England English established Europe existence fact favor feel Ferdinand and Isabella Free Soil party freedom German German empire give Greenland Hamadryad heart human hundred Iceland Idea interest Isabella Jacob Boehme justice Karlsefni king labor land Leif less letters living look mankind Mesmerism Mexicans Mexico mind moral nation nature nervous-system never Norsemen North Ocean party Peace of Westphalia peculiar perjury Philosophy poet poetry political post-office Prescott present princes question race reader received religion Rhaicos Rossi seems sensation Skrælings slave-holders slavery slaves soul South Spain spirit suppose thee thing thou thought thousand tion tribes true truth Vinland whole Wilmot Proviso witnesses words write