A Documentary History of the United StatesIndiana University Press, 1952 - 287 pages |
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Page 61
... force of public opinion , to mitigate and assuage it . A fire not to be quenched ; it demands a uniform vigilance to prevent its burst- ing into a flame , lest instead of warming it should con- sume . It is substantially true , that ...
... force of public opinion , to mitigate and assuage it . A fire not to be quenched ; it demands a uniform vigilance to prevent its burst- ing into a flame , lest instead of warming it should con- sume . It is substantially true , that ...
Page 118
... force , acting with in- creased intensity , as has been shown , will finally snap every cord , when nothing will be left to hold the States together except force . But , surely , that can , with no propriety of lan- guage , be called a ...
... force , acting with in- creased intensity , as has been shown , will finally snap every cord , when nothing will be left to hold the States together except force . But , surely , that can , with no propriety of lan- guage , be called a ...
Page 203
... forces to our shores without losing much of their own weight in the councils of Europe . In truth , a careful determination of the force that Great Britain or France could probably spare for operations against our coasts , if the latter ...
... forces to our shores without losing much of their own weight in the councils of Europe . In truth , a careful determination of the force that Great Britain or France could probably spare for operations against our coasts , if the latter ...
Contents
FOREWORD | 7 |
The Declaration of Independence | 13 |
FEDERALISTS VS REPUBLICANS | 44 |
Copyright | |
19 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
action administration agrarian Ameri American Andrew Jackson ARTICLE Articles of Confederation authority bank bimetalism cause citizens civilization colonial commerce conflict Congress conservatism Constitution corporations declared demands democracy democratic destroy Dred Scott duty economic effect election electors equal ernment executive existing farmer favor Federal Federalists force foreign Franklin D Frederick Jackson Turner freedom frontier gold standard independence individual industrial interests issue Jefferson judicial justice labor laissez-faire land legislation legislature liberty Lincoln majority means ment national government necessary North Northern object opinion organization party peace person political present President principles privileges progress Progressivism prosperity protect question radical reform regulation Representatives Republican Republican party respect revolution Roosevelt Senate slave slavery social South Southern sovereign Supreme Court tariff territory tion tional treaty Union United vote wealth William Jennings Bryan Wilson Woodrow Wilson