A Library of American Literature from the Earliest Settlement to the Present Time: Literature of the republic. pt. 3. 1835-1860Edmund Clarence Stedman, Ellen Mackay Hutchinson C. L. Webster, 1891 - American literature |
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Results 1-5 of 85
Page 2
... thought and delicate feeling ! How has social life been improved , and every variety of toil in the field and in the workshop been ennobled by the willing industry of free men ! How has humanity been growing conscious of its unity and ...
... thought and delicate feeling ! How has social life been improved , and every variety of toil in the field and in the workshop been ennobled by the willing industry of free men ! How has humanity been growing conscious of its unity and ...
Page 5
... thought obtained for itself free utterance by speech and by the press ; industry was commissioned to follow the bent of its own genius ; the system of commercial restrictions between states was reprobated and shattered ; and the oceans ...
... thought obtained for itself free utterance by speech and by the press ; industry was commissioned to follow the bent of its own genius ; the system of commercial restrictions between states was reprobated and shattered ; and the oceans ...
Page 8
... thought of selling themselves as laborers . House- holds , too , were separated ; the colonial newspapers contained adver- tisements of members of families seeking their companions , of sons anxious to reach and relieve their parents ...
... thought of selling themselves as laborers . House- holds , too , were separated ; the colonial newspapers contained adver- tisements of members of families seeking their companions , of sons anxious to reach and relieve their parents ...
Page 10
... thoughts from those about him , and , if using the pen , could neither spell correctly nor write coherently . Hence the ... thought no exertions too great to crush the spirit of revolution , and no punishment too cruel or too severe for ...
... thoughts from those about him , and , if using the pen , could neither spell correctly nor write coherently . Hence the ... thought no exertions too great to crush the spirit of revolution , and no punishment too cruel or too severe for ...
Page 16
... thought that an Italian could have a right to a country . The heir in the only line of protestant kings on the continent of Europe , too blind to see that he would one day be stripped of the chief part of his own share in the spoils ...
... thought that an Italian could have a right to a country . The heir in the only line of protestant kings on the continent of Europe , too blind to see that he would one day be stripped of the chief part of his own share in the spoils ...
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Common terms and phrases
American Anti-Slavery Society arms beauty behold blessing blue-winged teal BORN bosom breath character Chloe cloud Colosseum Constitution cried dark Deacon dead death deep DIED Distillery divine Donatello door dream earth England eyes face faith father fear feeling forest Funk gaze genius gone Goodman Brown Goody Cole hand head heard heart heaven Hester Prynne honor hope hour human labor lady Lady Blessington land laugh liberty light limp band lips living look ment Mentz METAMORA mind minister moral morning mother nation nature never night o'er once passed person principles Puritans Pyncheon scarlet letter seemed seen shadow silent slave slavery sleep smile soul spirit stood strong sweet thee things thou thought tion tree truth turned Union voice Voltaire wild wind woman words young young Goodman Brown