North-American Review and Miscellaneous Journal, Volume 3Jared Sparks, Edward Everett, James Russell Lowell, Henry Cabot Lodge Wells and Lilly, 1816 Vols. 277-230, no. 2 include Stuff and nonsense, v. 5-6, no. 8, Jan. 1929-Aug. 1930. |
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Page 10
... received the order of the Garter , and was sent on an expedition to persuade his son to surrender the posses- sions he held on the coast to the English government . The son refused to receive him , and his fortress was then beseiged by ...
... received the order of the Garter , and was sent on an expedition to persuade his son to surrender the posses- sions he held on the coast to the English government . The son refused to receive him , and his fortress was then beseiged by ...
Page 12
... received enough of publick and private encouragement , to admit of their being taught here by eminent professors , whose labours have been highly creditable to the Univer- sity , as well as beneficial to the student ; while the Law , so ...
... received enough of publick and private encouragement , to admit of their being taught here by eminent professors , whose labours have been highly creditable to the Univer- sity , as well as beneficial to the student ; while the Law , so ...
Page 14
... received here the elements of that learning , wisdom and patriotism , which have shed a lustre almost unparalleled , on so young a country . May we not , without vanity , indulge the anticipation , that American literature and science ...
... received here the elements of that learning , wisdom and patriotism , which have shed a lustre almost unparalleled , on so young a country . May we not , without vanity , indulge the anticipation , that American literature and science ...
Page 16
... received with as much horrour , as a scheme to instruct in magick or the black art . The profes- sion had not risen above the character of attorneys or scri- veners , and a scientifick course of study would have been as irksome , as it ...
... received with as much horrour , as a scheme to instruct in magick or the black art . The profes- sion had not risen above the character of attorneys or scri- veners , and a scientifick course of study would have been as irksome , as it ...
Page 21
... received as a political axiom , that complexity of laws is the price of freedom , and that despotism alone is equal to the task of establishing a simple and invariable standard for the regulation of the infinitely varied concerns of man ...
... received as a political axiom , that complexity of laws is the price of freedom , and that despotism alone is equal to the task of establishing a simple and invariable standard for the regulation of the infinitely varied concerns of man ...
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