| New England - 1815 - 48 pages
...its commencement, were not sufficient to counteract the prodigious impulse towards prosperity, which had been given to the nation. But a steady perseverance...richest advantages for securing the great objects of the Constitution have been wantonly rejected. While Europe reposes from, the convulsions that had shaken... | |
| 1815 - 628 pages
...its commencement, were not sufficient to counteract the prodigious impulse towards prosperity, which had been given to the nation. But a steady perseverance...the new plans of administration, at length developed administration, or of disposition in the enemy, should I their weakness and deformity, but not until... | |
| United States - 1815 - 68 pages
...commencement, were not sufficient to counteract the prodigious iiripul e towards prosperity, which had been given to the nation. But a steady perseverance in the new plajis of administration at length developed their weakness and deformity, but not until a majority... | |
| Theodore Dwight - Hartford Convention - 1833 - 466 pages
...its commencement, were not sufficient to counteract the prodigious impulse towards prosperity, which had been given to the nation. But a steady perseverance...richest advantages for securing the great objects of the constitution have been wantonly rejected. While Europe reposes from the convulsions that had shaken... | |
| Theodore Dwight - Hartford Convention - 1833 - 480 pages
...its commencement, were not sufficient to counteract the prodigious impulse towards prosperity, which had been given to the nation. But a steady perseverance...majority of the people had been deceived by flattery, an5 inflamed by passion, into blindness to their defects. Under the withering influence of this new... | |
| Henry Adams - Federal Party - 1877 - 462 pages
...administration established in the hands of a party opposed to the Washington policy, the report says that " a steady perseverance in the new plans of administration...richest advantages for securing the great objects of the Constitution have been wantonly rejected. While Europe reposes from the convulsions that had shaken... | |
| Oliver Joseph Thatcher - Encyclopedias and dictionaries - 1907 - 618 pages
...its commencement, were not sufficient to counteract the prodigious impulse towards prosperity, which had been given to the nation. But a steady perseverance...flattery, and inflamed by passion, into blindness of their defects. Under the withering influence of this new system, the declension of the nation has... | |
| 1911 - 44 pages
...its commencement, were not sufficient to counteract the prodigious impulse towards prosperity, which had been given to the nation. But a steady perseverance...richest advantages for securing the great objects of the constitution have been wantonly rejected. While Europe reposes from the convulsions that had shaken... | |
| Oliver J. Thatcher - History - 2004 - 476 pages
...its commencement, were not sufficient to counteract the prodigious impulse towards prosperity, which had been given to the nation. But a steady perseverance...flattery, and inflamed by passion, into blindness of their defects. Under the withering influence of this new system, the declension of the nation has... | |
| Lorenzo de Zavala - History - 2005 - 436 pages
...its commencement, were not sufficient to counteract the prodigious impulse towards prosperity, which had been given to the nation. But a steady perseverance...declension of the, nation has been uniform and rapid. (p. 332) The richest advantages for securing the great objects of the constitution have been wantonly... | |
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