Masterpieces of Eloquence: Famous Orations of Great World Leaders from Early Greece to the Present Time, Volume 21Mayo Williamson Hazeltine P. F. Collier & Son, 1905 - 11114 pages |
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Page 8768
... equal in civil rights , no longer recognizing any distinctions of caste or color . Our young Republic had successfully ended the experiment of its existence and for the first time took its place - a full , round , high place among the ...
... equal in civil rights , no longer recognizing any distinctions of caste or color . Our young Republic had successfully ended the experiment of its existence and for the first time took its place - a full , round , high place among the ...
Page 8770
... equal to the hour ; we come to reflect rather than to weep ; we come to gather up the lessons taught by their example ; to consider the fruits of the victory they have secured for us , and hence to deduce our duty as a nation in the ...
... equal to the hour ; we come to reflect rather than to weep ; we come to gather up the lessons taught by their example ; to consider the fruits of the victory they have secured for us , and hence to deduce our duty as a nation in the ...
Page 8771
... equal to their great task ? Turn over in your own minds , for I have no time even to refer to the strange incidents in their wonderful history , verifying our belief that God superintends the founding of States ; follow the colonies ...
... equal to their great task ? Turn over in your own minds , for I have no time even to refer to the strange incidents in their wonderful history , verifying our belief that God superintends the founding of States ; follow the colonies ...
Page 8772
... equal rights of all men , the right of all to participate in the privileges and benefits of civil government , as they share its burdens , al- though to our minds familiar and self - evident truths , have dawned gradually upon the world ...
... equal rights of all men , the right of all to participate in the privileges and benefits of civil government , as they share its burdens , al- though to our minds familiar and self - evident truths , have dawned gradually upon the world ...
Page 8773
... equal privileges and were preferred for their merits and not for their birth , he spoke in a city of which no inconsiderable portion of its in- habitants were slaves . By all men he meant all Athenians ; he did not recognize that any ...
... equal privileges and were preferred for their merits and not for their birth , he spoke in a city of which no inconsiderable portion of its in- habitants were slaves . By all men he meant all Athenians ; he did not recognize that any ...
Other editions - View all
Masterpieces of Eloquence; Famous Orations of Great World Leaders ..., Volume 5 Mayo W. 1841-1909 Hazeltine No preview available - 2016 |
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