The North-American Review and Miscellaneous Journal, Volume 11Jared Sparks, Edward Everett, James Russell Lowell, Henry Cabot Lodge Wells and Lilly, 1820 Vols. 277-230, no. 2 include Stuff and nonsense, v. 5-6, no. 8, Jan. 1929-Aug. 1930. |
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Page 10
... land , -learning the language by going of neces- sity into an American family , and laying up in the purchase money a little capital for future support . Our author adds , that the treatment of the emigrants while in service is so kind ...
... land , -learning the language by going of neces- sity into an American family , and laying up in the purchase money a little capital for future support . Our author adds , that the treatment of the emigrants while in service is so kind ...
Page 11
... land- lord having in view more the tenant's interest than his own . ] But these are only exceptions . In this free country , each ore loves to possess a property of his own , and finds not only a possibility but a facility of so doing ...
... land- lord having in view more the tenant's interest than his own . ] But these are only exceptions . In this free country , each ore loves to possess a property of his own , and finds not only a possibility but a facility of so doing ...
Page 12
... land- ed 5000 emigrants in Philadelphia ; but we apprehend our author to have been misled by his authorities , when he sup- poses that half the population of Pennsylvania is German or of German descent . The German language is fast ...
... land- ed 5000 emigrants in Philadelphia ; but we apprehend our author to have been misled by his authorities , when he sup- poses that half the population of Pennsylvania is German or of German descent . The German language is fast ...
Page 15
... land . " pp . 90 , 91 . On the first perusal of these spirited remarks , we were , to use an expressive vulgarism , at a loss to know what the author would be at . We felt , to be sure , a becoming sympa- J thy with M. de Fürstenwärther ...
... land . " pp . 90 , 91 . On the first perusal of these spirited remarks , we were , to use an expressive vulgarism , at a loss to know what the author would be at . We felt , to be sure , a becoming sympa- J thy with M. de Fürstenwärther ...
Page 16
... land enough to support , and government enough to rule millions more than our country yet contains ; -and though we are far from thinking very highly of that finer freedom of the soul , ' which the German redemptioners bring with them ...
... land enough to support , and government enough to rule millions more than our country yet contains ; -and though we are far from thinking very highly of that finer freedom of the soul , ' which the German redemptioners bring with them ...
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