The New-England Magazine, Band 2Joseph Tinker Buckingham, Edwin Buckingham, Samuel Gridley Howe, John Osborne Sargent, Park Benjamin J. T. and E. Buckingham, 1832 |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-5 von 54
Seite 8
... supposed to be the resemblance of a deceased person , or the corporeal appearance of a disembodied spirit , addressing itself always to the eye , and 00 Is a Belief in Ghosts consistent with Reason ? 154 Reason, is a belief in Ghosts ...
... supposed to be the resemblance of a deceased person , or the corporeal appearance of a disembodied spirit , addressing itself always to the eye , and 00 Is a Belief in Ghosts consistent with Reason ? 154 Reason, is a belief in Ghosts ...
Seite 17
... supposed are , therefore , possible . If , two hundred years hence , the free negroes shall have made no ma- terial advance toward political equality , or having made a consider- able one , if the prejudice shall not have disappeared ...
... supposed are , therefore , possible . If , two hundred years hence , the free negroes shall have made no ma- terial advance toward political equality , or having made a consider- able one , if the prejudice shall not have disappeared ...
Seite 22
... supposed state should then pass a law , admitting each freedman to all the further privileges of citizenship , five years after the date of emancipation - provided , always , the said freedman should be able to produce a certificate of ...
... supposed state should then pass a law , admitting each freedman to all the further privileges of citizenship , five years after the date of emancipation - provided , always , the said freedman should be able to produce a certificate of ...
Seite 65
... supposed to have a call of Providence to govern ; and they were conse- quently presumed to have the disinterested wish to govern , not for their own sakes , but for the good of the people . It was further supposed , that the people did ...
... supposed to have a call of Providence to govern ; and they were conse- quently presumed to have the disinterested wish to govern , not for their own sakes , but for the good of the people . It was further supposed , that the people did ...
Seite 71
... supposed deficiency in the colonial institutions of government . On the contrary , we were traversed and embarrassed , at every step , by ungracious and unfriendly foreign interference . Since the revolution , we have certainly passed ...
... supposed deficiency in the colonial institutions of government . On the contrary , we were traversed and embarrassed , at every step , by ungracious and unfriendly foreign interference . Since the revolution , we have certainly passed ...
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
American American Colonization Society amount appears Bank beautiful better blacks Boston called Candu cent character Colonization Society colony color Columbia river Committee common Congress constitution Court death dollars duties eloquent emigrants equal evil favor feel friends gentleman Girard give Governor Great-Britain heart Henry A. S. Dearborn honor House hundred Indians interest John Kentucky labor lady land Legislature less Liberia live look Massachusetts means ment miles millions mind moral nature never New-England New-York object Ohio passed Pennsylvania persons Philadelphia Pocahontas political present purpose Richard Savage river seems seen sentiment slavery slaves speak spirit square mile Stephen Girard story supposed Tariff of 1824 taste thing thou thought thousand tion town Treasury treaty truth United Virginia whole William words writer