Jefferson's Letters: Selections from the Private and Political Correspondence of Thomas Jefferson, Telling the Story of American Independence and the Founding of the American GovernmentWisconsin Hale, 1986 - 374 Seiten |
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Seite 82
... seen some of them which would have weighed five or six times as much . . . . I must observe also , that the horns of the deer , which accompany these spoils , are not of the fifth or sixth part of the weight of some that I have seen ...
... seen some of them which would have weighed five or six times as much . . . . I must observe also , that the horns of the deer , which accompany these spoils , are not of the fifth or sixth part of the weight of some that I have seen ...
Seite 93
... seen bows , the one end of which has been very near to him , and the other at a very great distance . I have often seen the same thing myself . I recollect well to have seen the end of a rainbow between myself and a house , or between ...
... seen bows , the one end of which has been very near to him , and the other at a very great distance . I have often seen the same thing myself . I recollect well to have seen the end of a rainbow between myself and a house , or between ...
Seite 94
... seen it more than a semi - circle . I have often seen the leg of the bow below my level . My situation at Monti- cello admits this , because there is a mountain there in the opposite direction of the afternoon's sun , the valley between ...
... seen it more than a semi - circle . I have often seen the leg of the bow below my level . My situation at Monti- cello admits this , because there is a mountain there in the opposite direction of the afternoon's sun , the valley between ...
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Adams America become believe body called character circumstances citizens commerce common Congress consider Constitution DEAR SIR,-I declaration dispositions doubt duty earth endeavor enemy England esteem Europe executive favor fear federalists foreign France Franklin freedom freedom of religion give habeas corpus hand happiness HENRY DEARBORN honor hope idea Indians interest JAMES MADISON January January 11 JOHN ADAMS July June King labor lands letter liberty Lord Cornwallis ment mind MONTICELLO moral nation nature never object observed occasion opinion PARIS party peace perhaps person PHILADELPHIA political POPLAR FOREST possession present President principles probably produce proposed question received religion render republican respect revolution sensible sentiments SIR,-Your society Spain suppose things THOMAS PAINE tion truth United Virginia vote WASHINGTON whole Williamsburg wish write