North-American Review and Miscellaneous JournalUniversity of Northern Iowa, 1832 |
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Page 11
... capital of the country is not so entirely imaginary , nor yet so completely insignificant , as some have supposed . The whole amount of this dormant capital , whatever it may be , which is thus brought into action , may be regarded as a ...
... capital of the country is not so entirely imaginary , nor yet so completely insignificant , as some have supposed . The whole amount of this dormant capital , whatever it may be , which is thus brought into action , may be regarded as a ...
Page 10
... capital of the country is not so entirely imaginary , nor yet so completely insignificant , as some have supposed . The whole amount of this dormant capital , whatever it may be , which is thus brought into action , may be regarded as a ...
... capital of the country is not so entirely imaginary , nor yet so completely insignificant , as some have supposed . The whole amount of this dormant capital , whatever it may be , which is thus brought into action , may be regarded as a ...
Page 12
... capital . " The capital which is put in motion by the es- tablishment of manufactures , is therefore not withdrawn from other employments , but is furnished by the increase that regularly takes place in every flourishing community ...
... capital . " The capital which is put in motion by the es- tablishment of manufactures , is therefore not withdrawn from other employments , but is furnished by the increase that regularly takes place in every flourishing community ...
Contents
COUSINS PHILOSOPHY | 19 |
LIFE AND TIMES OF RICHARD BAXTER | 36 |
HODGSONS MEMOIRS ON THE BERBER LANGUAGE | 54 |
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admitted African American amount ancient appears Bank beautiful Berber Berber language Boston called capital character Cholera circumstances Colony constitution cotton course Crocker & Brewster cultivation dialect disease domestic manufactures emigrants employed England equal establishment existence fact favor feeling foreign forests Genoese dialect give Government human hundred important inhabitants insects interest island Italian Italian language Kabyle Kentucky l'humanité labor land language less letter Liberia manner manumitted memorialists ment mind moral mountains native nature Niger object observed Odin opinion Pantellaria passed peculiar persons philosophy political population possession present principle produced protecting duties protecting policy purpose readers reason regard remarkable residence respect river Romanesco says Sir James Mackintosh Skalds slavery slaves Society soil Spain spirit supply supposed thing tion town trees truth Tuggurt United Virginia whole words writers XXXV.-No