The Southern Quarterly Review, Volumen26Daniel Kimball Whitaker, Milton Clapp, William Gilmore Simms, James Henley Thornwell E. H. Britton, 1854 |
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Página 12
... languages in which they are respectively written , it would be wholly impossible to tell which was the chroni- cle of the ancient , and which the exposition of the modern horrors . With this commentary on the external diversities by ...
... languages in which they are respectively written , it would be wholly impossible to tell which was the chroni- cle of the ancient , and which the exposition of the modern horrors . With this commentary on the external diversities by ...
Página 43
... language which meets corroboration at a period as recent as the times of Charles II . " The Britons are willing to supply our armies with new levies ; they pay their tribute without a murmur ; and they perform all the services * In his ...
... language which meets corroboration at a period as recent as the times of Charles II . " The Britons are willing to supply our armies with new levies ; they pay their tribute without a murmur ; and they perform all the services * In his ...
Página 52
... we all must feel on this score , the following language will surely do it : * * Calhoun's Works , vol . i . , page 56 . " There is another error , not less great and 52 [ July , POLITICAL PHILOSOPHY OF SOUTH - CAROLINA .
... we all must feel on this score , the following language will surely do it : * * Calhoun's Works , vol . i . , page 56 . " There is another error , not less great and 52 [ July , POLITICAL PHILOSOPHY OF SOUTH - CAROLINA .
Página 68
... languages , and with little similarity , either in manners , hab- its or ideas of government . With nothing in common but interest , who would have ventured to foretell the result ? Yet , by reducing the principles of government as ...
... languages , and with little similarity , either in manners , hab- its or ideas of government . With nothing in common but interest , who would have ventured to foretell the result ? Yet , by reducing the principles of government as ...
Página 86
... language is hard and inarticulate , and sounds like so much stuttering or grunting to the ears of the stranger . Dressed in sheep - skins , their naked heads are smeared and plaistered with fat and grease , to such a degree as to form a ...
... language is hard and inarticulate , and sounds like so much stuttering or grunting to the ears of the stranger . Dressed in sheep - skins , their naked heads are smeared and plaistered with fat and grease , to such a degree as to form a ...
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