Southern Quarterly Review, Volume 2Daniel Kimball Whitaker, Milton Clapp, William Gilmore Simms, James Henley Thornwell Wiley & Putnam, 1967 |
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Page 15
... common soldiers would naturally be taken , -Africans . This supposition , as the most plausible , if not the only possible method of accounting for the existence of evidence decisive , and , in its nature , in- contestible on both sides ...
... common soldiers would naturally be taken , -Africans . This supposition , as the most plausible , if not the only possible method of accounting for the existence of evidence decisive , and , in its nature , in- contestible on both sides ...
Page 59
... common cause , in preventing , by adequate punish- ments . These crimes are considered so offensive to the presumed and revealed law of God , that with respect to them , all civilized people , have agreed to be united and be- cause two ...
... common cause , in preventing , by adequate punish- ments . These crimes are considered so offensive to the presumed and revealed law of God , that with respect to them , all civilized people , have agreed to be united and be- cause two ...
Page 407
... common sense is not in anywise to be disregarded . This work of our author did not , how- ever , materially affect the popularity of the system which it attacked . The subsequent explosion of the Cartesian theory , renders further ...
... common sense is not in anywise to be disregarded . This work of our author did not , how- ever , materially affect the popularity of the system which it attacked . The subsequent explosion of the Cartesian theory , renders further ...
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