The Southern Quarterly Review, Volumen26Daniel Kimball Whitaker, Milton Clapp, William Gilmore Simms, James Henley Thornwell E. H. Britton, 1854 |
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Página 27
... known under the desig- nation of his boyhood , Octavius , and his Imperial title , Au- gustus . We have profited by the researches and conceptions of Mr. Merivale , though we have ventured to draw a much bolder , and , we think , more ...
... known under the desig- nation of his boyhood , Octavius , and his Imperial title , Au- gustus . We have profited by the researches and conceptions of Mr. Merivale , though we have ventured to draw a much bolder , and , we think , more ...
Página 43
... known to a certain extent before it can be loved . Nations , in their very infancy , enjoy liberty to the exact extent to which their capacity and virtue entitle them . Such we all know to have been the case with Britain ; a nation ...
... known to a certain extent before it can be loved . Nations , in their very infancy , enjoy liberty to the exact extent to which their capacity and virtue entitle them . Such we all know to have been the case with Britain ; a nation ...
Página 49
... known , or at least dreamed of . Sidney's meaning was this : -The government can neither pass , nor execute a law , to which the mass of the people have not assented through the usual channels whereby their consent is always conveyed ...
... known , or at least dreamed of . Sidney's meaning was this : -The government can neither pass , nor execute a law , to which the mass of the people have not assented through the usual channels whereby their consent is always conveyed ...
Página 51
... known to be looked up to by all , or almost all others . This we cannot deny and we cannot prevent . Be our own views ever so enlightened , our disposition ever so independent , our contempt of wealth ever so philosophical , we are ...
... known to be looked up to by all , or almost all others . This we cannot deny and we cannot prevent . Be our own views ever so enlightened , our disposition ever so independent , our contempt of wealth ever so philosophical , we are ...
Página 77
... known to them . It was introduced , says La Harpe , on the Gold Coast by the Portu- guese , from the Island of St. Thomas .— ( Abrégé des Voyages , tom . 3 , p . 181. ) It has multiplied and is now one of their greatest blessings . It ...
... known to them . It was introduced , says La Harpe , on the Gold Coast by the Portu- guese , from the Island of St. Thomas .— ( Abrégé des Voyages , tom . 3 , p . 181. ) It has multiplied and is now one of their greatest blessings . It ...
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