Lectures on the Growth and Development of the United States: Illustrated, Volume 4Edwin Wiley, Irving Everett Rines, Albert Bushnell Hart American Educational Alliance, 1916 - United States |
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Page 4
... effects & great advantages resulting naturally in our favor among foreign nations as well as among ourselves . Much of ... effect . But , after all , much depends upon the people who are to be governed . We have been guarding against an ...
... effects & great advantages resulting naturally in our favor among foreign nations as well as among ourselves . Much of ... effect . But , after all , much depends upon the people who are to be governed . We have been guarding against an ...
Page 5
... effects will soon be distin- guishable . When the people shall find themselves secure under an energetic government , when foreign nations shall be disposed to give us equal advantages in commerce from dread of retaliation , when the ...
... effects will soon be distin- guishable . When the people shall find themselves secure under an energetic government , when foreign nations shall be disposed to give us equal advantages in commerce from dread of retaliation , when the ...
Page 10
... effects of anarchy , that you may see why I wish for a good government . Last winter people took up arms , and then , if you went to speak to them , you They would rob you of your property , threaten to had the musket of death presented ...
... effects of anarchy , that you may see why I wish for a good government . Last winter people took up arms , and then , if you went to speak to them , you They would rob you of your property , threaten to had the musket of death presented ...
Page 13
... effect , that this Con- stitution is very full of radical faults , and that he would adopt it with a protest as to its imper- fections , in order that they may be corrected at a future day . The bar are generally against it ; so are the ...
... effect , that this Con- stitution is very full of radical faults , and that he would adopt it with a protest as to its imper- fections , in order that they may be corrected at a future day . The bar are generally against it ; so are the ...
Page 20
... effect to it . But why has this excited so much wonder and applause ? Because it is of so much magnitude , and because it is liable to be frustrated by so many accidents . If it has ex- cited so much wonder , that the United States have ...
... effect to it . But why has this excited so much wonder and applause ? Because it is of so much magnitude , and because it is liable to be frustrated by so many accidents . If it has ex- cited so much wonder , that the United States have ...
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