Southern Quarterly Review, Volume 15Daniel Kimball Whitaker, Milton Clapp, William Gilmore Simms, James Henley Thornwell Wiley & Putnam, 1967 |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 57
Page 77
... regard to the interest which it awakens by its shows of ancient manners and society , and its illustration of favorite periods in a favorite history ; -and pleasantly , in regard to the story , which is one of considerable force and ...
... regard to the interest which it awakens by its shows of ancient manners and society , and its illustration of favorite periods in a favorite history ; -and pleasantly , in regard to the story , which is one of considerable force and ...
Page 95
... regard to annexa- tion , and such the anxieties in cabinets of all parties in the United States , to restore our asserted ancient limits , when our presses intimated in 1844 , that President Tyler was negotiating a treaty with Texas ...
... regard to annexa- tion , and such the anxieties in cabinets of all parties in the United States , to restore our asserted ancient limits , when our presses intimated in 1844 , that President Tyler was negotiating a treaty with Texas ...
Page 287
... regard it as among the greatest of evils to have vomited indiscriminately upon our shores , the ignorance , idleness , imprudence , viciousness and pauper- ism , which are the characteristic traits of the mass of foreign immigrants . It ...
... regard it as among the greatest of evils to have vomited indiscriminately upon our shores , the ignorance , idleness , imprudence , viciousness and pauper- ism , which are the characteristic traits of the mass of foreign immigrants . It ...
Contents
ART PAGE | 12 |
GUIZOTS DEMOCRACY IN FRANCE | 114 |
CRITICAL NOTICES | 253 |
Copyright | |
10 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
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