Southern Quarterly Review, Volume 15Daniel Kimball Whitaker, Milton Clapp, William Gilmore Simms, James Henley Thornwell Wiley & Putnam, 1967 |
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Page 4
... feel the entire degradation to which they were condemned . Uneducated men , with provision enough to gratify their ... feeling of dependance on those who have in charge the guidance of affairs . The desire for self - gov- ernment is more ...
... feel the entire degradation to which they were condemned . Uneducated men , with provision enough to gratify their ... feeling of dependance on those who have in charge the guidance of affairs . The desire for self - gov- ernment is more ...
Page 54
... feel our own deficiencies of a physical and external sort , long in advance of those which belong to the exercise of a peculiar and independent think- ing . As our people look to Great Britain , and survey her towers and palaces , the ...
... feel our own deficiencies of a physical and external sort , long in advance of those which belong to the exercise of a peculiar and independent think- ing . As our people look to Great Britain , and survey her towers and palaces , the ...
Page 315
... feel as much bound to continue in the Establishment as he does to leave it . It is to be regretted , therefore , that he did not feel himself at liberty to omit altogether the grave general conclu- sion against all union of Church and ...
... feel as much bound to continue in the Establishment as he does to leave it . It is to be regretted , therefore , that he did not feel himself at liberty to omit altogether the grave general conclu- sion against all union of Church and ...
Contents
ART PAGE | 12 |
GUIZOTS DEMOCRACY IN FRANCE | 114 |
CRITICAL NOTICES | 253 |
Copyright | |
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abolitionists African slave trade American become better British capital character Charleston Church civilization Coatzacoalcos common constitution democracy desire doubt duty England equally evil existence fact faith fancy favor feel fiction force foreign France Frémont French genius give Guizot Gulf of Mexico human increase interest isthmus isthmus of Panama Isthmus of Tehuantepec justice labor land less liberty Louis Philippe matter means ment Mexican Mexico miles mind Minister moral nation nature necessity never New-York North object opinion party passions peace peculiar persons Philip Van Artevelde planter Political Economy possession principles produce progress question race regard render republic respect result route Silesia sion slave trade slavery social society South Southern spirit taste Tehuantepec territory Texas thing tical tion true truth Union United wealth Whateley whole writer