The Life, Eulogy, and Great Orations of Daniel WebsterW.M. Hayward & Company, 1853 - 112 pages |
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Page 7
... effects upon the public mind - was delivered in the Senate on the 26th of January 1830 , in the debate on what are called ' Foot's Resolutions . ' Next to the Constitution itself , this speech is esteemed to be the most correct and ...
... effects upon the public mind - was delivered in the Senate on the 26th of January 1830 , in the debate on what are called ' Foot's Resolutions . ' Next to the Constitution itself , this speech is esteemed to be the most correct and ...
Page 17
... effect it produced upon others - and made him restless . He seemed to seek an opportunity to break in upon the speaker ; and later in the day , as Mr. Webster was exposing the gross and ludi- crous inconsistencies of South Carolina ...
... effect it produced upon others - and made him restless . He seemed to seek an opportunity to break in upon the speaker ; and later in the day , as Mr. Webster was exposing the gross and ludi- crous inconsistencies of South Carolina ...
Page 20
... effect of the speech arose , of course , from the orator's delivery - the tones of his voice , his countenance , and manner . * These die mostly with the occasion that calls them forth the impression is lost in the attempt at ...
... effect of the speech arose , of course , from the orator's delivery - the tones of his voice , his countenance , and manner . * These die mostly with the occasion that calls them forth the impression is lost in the attempt at ...
Page 26
... effect . A biogra pher mentions , among others , the following : " One night , before railroads were built , he was forced to make a journey by private conveyance from Baltimore to Washington . The man that drove the wagon , was such an ...
... effect . A biogra pher mentions , among others , the following : " One night , before railroads were built , he was forced to make a journey by private conveyance from Baltimore to Washington . The man that drove the wagon , was such an ...
Page 49
... effect upon the minds of all present , can never be described . All things were in harmony , -the beauty of the day , the falling leaves , the countenances of the assembled multitude , the appropri- ate arrangements , the aspect of the ...
... effect upon the minds of all present , can never be described . All things were in harmony , -the beauty of the day , the falling leaves , the countenances of the assembled multitude , the appropri- ate arrangements , the aspect of the ...
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