The United States Literary Gazette, Band 3Cummings, Hilliard, & Company, 1826 |
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Seite 11
... seem- ed , that of all misfortunes , that of incurring his displeasure was still the greatest , so rooted were their confidence in , and submission to that man who had subjected the world to them ; whose genius , hitherto uni- formly ...
... seem- ed , that of all misfortunes , that of incurring his displeasure was still the greatest , so rooted were their confidence in , and submission to that man who had subjected the world to them ; whose genius , hitherto uni- formly ...
Seite 14
... seems an evil to one will seem only a trifling inconvenience to another , and those who agree in the evil , will differ in the remedy . In our judgment the best remedy , though not at first view that proposed by the memo- rial , would ...
... seems an evil to one will seem only a trifling inconvenience to another , and those who agree in the evil , will differ in the remedy . In our judgment the best remedy , though not at first view that proposed by the memo- rial , would ...
Seite 19
... seems to us incomparably the best part of it . For it contains a great many crudities , a great many truisms , a great many things which are not true , a great many things we have repeatedly seen better stated before , without any new ...
... seems to us incomparably the best part of it . For it contains a great many crudities , a great many truisms , a great many things which are not true , a great many things we have repeatedly seen better stated before , without any new ...
Seite 27
... seems to be more jingle than common - sense in these things ; -I shall therefore add but one more piece from the collection before me . The following would not , in the orthodoxy of poetical gallants , be considered a Valentine ; and I ...
... seems to be more jingle than common - sense in these things ; -I shall therefore add but one more piece from the collection before me . The following would not , in the orthodoxy of poetical gallants , be considered a Valentine ; and I ...
Seite 31
... seems to take it for granted , that if the slave - trade were abolished , intelligent Africans would spring up , he does not tell us where they are to come from , who might be formed into a colony on the coast of Africa , which would ...
... seems to take it for granted , that if the slave - trade were abolished , intelligent Africans would spring up , he does not tell us where they are to come from , who might be formed into a colony on the coast of Africa , which would ...
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