Southern Quarterly Review, Volume 2Daniel Kimball Whitaker, Milton Clapp, William Gilmore Simms, James Henley Thornwell Wiley & Putnam, 1967 |
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Page 63
... force its laws against the offenee . If he fly to another , two obligations arise , one on the part of the injured State to demand and punish ; another on the part of the govern- ment where he takes refuge , to deliver , and thus not ...
... force its laws against the offenee . If he fly to another , two obligations arise , one on the part of the injured State to demand and punish ; another on the part of the govern- ment where he takes refuge , to deliver , and thus not ...
Page 109
... force advance and take the capital ? Could it hold it , until it dictated terms of peace ? Could it return in safety to its own borders ? To all these questions , we emphatically answer , no ! It would be a war against the people , and ...
... force advance and take the capital ? Could it hold it , until it dictated terms of peace ? Could it return in safety to its own borders ? To all these questions , we emphatically answer , no ! It would be a war against the people , and ...
Page 391
... force ; soldiers , arms , artillery and fortifications , may render us safe from foreign aggression : but the sacred ark of our liberties is kept in the temple of the human mind , and can only be preserved inviolate , by gathering ...
... force ; soldiers , arms , artillery and fortifications , may render us safe from foreign aggression : but the sacred ark of our liberties is kept in the temple of the human mind , and can only be preserved inviolate , by gathering ...
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