| United States - 1844 - 638 pages
...affect the prosperity of the American Union." " The British government, as the United States well knows (know!) have never sought in any way to stir up disaffection...States placed on the firm and solid footing, which, we conscieatiously believe, is to be attained by general freedom alone, we have never in our treatment... | |
| John Wooleston Tibbatts - Texas - 1844 - 58 pages
...kind in the sblvehoUing Stairs of th*:American Union. Much as we should wish to кео thos<States placed on the firm and solid footing which we conscientiously...never, in our treatment of them, made any difference hetwL-en the- slavеholdinç and free, States of the Union. Aliare, in our eyes, entitled, as component... | |
| Daniel Kimball Whitaker, Milton Clapp, William Gilmore Simms, James Henley Thornwell - 1844 - 564 pages
...to adopt, for this humane and virtuous purpose, are open and undisguised. That she has never sought to stir up disaffection or excitement of any kind in the slave-holding States of the American Union : and that tlic slave-holding States may be assured, that although she slutll not desist from tliose... | |
| Georg Friedrich Martens, Friedrich Wilhelm August Murhard, Murhard, Pinhas, Hopf - Europe - 1847 - 712 pages
...seeking to act, directly or indirectly , in a political sense, on the United States through Texas. The British government, as the United States well...which we conscientiously believe is to be attained by the general freedom alone, we have never in our treatment of them made any difference between the slave... | |
| 1844 - 454 pages
...sought in any way to stir up disaffection or excilement of any kind in the slave holding stales of Ihe American Union. Much as we should wish to see those states placed on the firm anil solid footing which we conscientiously believe is to be attained by general freedom alone, we... | |
| John Malcolm Forbes Ludlow - Kansas - 1862 - 440 pages
...there, as elsewhere." But England had never sought to stir up disaffection in the slave-states of the Union. " Much as we should wish to see those states...believe is to be attained by general freedom alone ... the governments of the slaveholding states may rest assured, that, although we shall not desist... | |
| Criticism - 1844 - 666 pages
...seeking to act, directly or indirectly, in a political sense, on the Unites' States through Texas. " The British government, as the United States well...stir up disaffection or excitement of any kind in the -!'',' holding States of the American Union. Muchaa we should wish to see those States placed on the... | |
| United States. Congress. House - United States - 1246 pages
...the United States through Texas. The British Government, as the United States well know, have neref sought in any way to stir up disaffection or excitement...Much as we should wish to see those States placed on tho firm and solid footing which we conscientiously believe is to be attained by general freedom alone,... | |
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