The Works of William H. Seward, Volume 4Houghton, Mifflin, 1884 - New York (State) |
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Page iv
... True Basis of American Independence ; The Physical , Moral and Intellectual Development of the American People ; and The Pilgrims and Liberty . A BIOGRAPHY OF DE WITT CLINTON , occupies the next twenty pages of the volume . This is an ...
... True Basis of American Independence ; The Physical , Moral and Intellectual Development of the American People ; and The Pilgrims and Liberty . A BIOGRAPHY OF DE WITT CLINTON , occupies the next twenty pages of the volume . This is an ...
Page viii
... True Basis of American Independence , 144 . Address before the Phi Beta Kappa Society of Yale College , New Haven , July 26 , 1854 -- The Physical , Moral and Intellectual Development of the American People , 160 . Oration on ...
... True Basis of American Independence , 144 . Address before the Phi Beta Kappa Society of Yale College , New Haven , July 26 , 1854 -- The Physical , Moral and Intellectual Development of the American People , 160 . Oration on ...
Page 14
... true executive officer of a state like New York , are equal to those several qualities demanded of any ruler in this country or in Europe . When we consider the great metropolis , itself containing a nation , the numerous growing towns ...
... true executive officer of a state like New York , are equal to those several qualities demanded of any ruler in this country or in Europe . When we consider the great metropolis , itself containing a nation , the numerous growing towns ...
Page 27
... true intent and significance of the compromise measures of 1850. For his resistance to those measures , Mr. Seward had been vehemently denounced . But at the very commencement of the Nebraska strug- gle , the friends of freedom at the ...
... true intent and significance of the compromise measures of 1850. For his resistance to those measures , Mr. Seward had been vehemently denounced . But at the very commencement of the Nebraska strug- gle , the friends of freedom at the ...
Page 57
... true , and unanimously acted upon it when they framed the constitution of the United States . They regarded the existence of the servile system in so many of the states with sorrow and shame , which they openly confessed , and they ...
... true , and unanimously acted upon it when they framed the constitution of the United States . They regarded the existence of the servile system in so many of the states with sorrow and shame , which they openly confessed , and they ...
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Abraham Lincoln abrogation admission admitted adopted African slave trade American army authority bill candidate capital civil commerce committee compromise of 1850 conflict congress constitution continent convention court debate declared democratic party duty election emigration empire equal established existing faith favor fellow citizens foreign forever free labor freedom freemen friends governor honorable senator house of representatives human hundred institutions interests justice land laws Lecompton Lecompton constitution legislative legislature liberty maintain mankind Massachusetts ment Mexico Mississippi Missouri compromise moral nature negro never nevertheless non-slaveholding organized Pacific ocean passed peace political popular popular sovereignty present president principle privileged class question republic republican party river secure Seward slave labor slave power slaveholding class slavery society speech stand statesman statute territory of Kansas Texas tion Topeka constitution Union United usurpation virtue vote whig whole wise York