North-American Review and Miscellaneous Journal, Volume 77Jared Sparks, Edward Everett, James Russell Lowell, Henry Cabot Lodge University of Northern Iowa, 1853 Vols. 277-230, no. 2 include Stuff and nonsense, v. 5-6, no. 8, Jan. 1929-Aug. 1930. |
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... respecting the History , Condition , and Prospects of the Indian Tribes of the United States ; collected and prepared under the Di- rection of the Bureau of Indian Affairs . By HENRY R. SCHOOLCRAFT , LL . D. NEW PUBLICATIONS RECEIVED ...
... respecting the History , Condition , and Prospects of the Indian Tribes of the United States ; collected and prepared under the Di- rection of the Bureau of Indian Affairs . By HENRY R. SCHOOLCRAFT , LL . D. NEW PUBLICATIONS RECEIVED ...
Page 21
... respect for the Antinomies and Germans , and " most distinguished consideration " for Voltaire and Parisian persi- flage , still , it may not be quite necessary for us , on the pre- sent occasion , either to stand still in ...
... respect for the Antinomies and Germans , and " most distinguished consideration " for Voltaire and Parisian persi- flage , still , it may not be quite necessary for us , on the pre- sent occasion , either to stand still in ...
Page 33
... respects the best of its fruit , is the Preliminary Discourse , in which the object and design are set forth in the style of those essays for which Lord Brougham is so famous , and which he has written so well , - elegant , copious ...
... respects the best of its fruit , is the Preliminary Discourse , in which the object and design are set forth in the style of those essays for which Lord Brougham is so famous , and which he has written so well , - elegant , copious ...
Page 34
... respect , the importance of knowledge as a political element is not only not exaggerated , but not even fully appre- ciated ; we mean that knowledge of the opinions of others , and that general and mutual action and reaction of one mind ...
... respect , the importance of knowledge as a political element is not only not exaggerated , but not even fully appre- ciated ; we mean that knowledge of the opinions of others , and that general and mutual action and reaction of one mind ...
Page 43
... respect to the objects which a government is capable of accomplishing , do not affect this inherent quality any more than they do the extent of the power exerted ; and it is evident that all degrees of slavery and freedom may exist ...
... respect to the objects which a government is capable of accomplishing , do not affect this inherent quality any more than they do the extent of the power exerted ; and it is evident that all degrees of slavery and freedom may exist ...
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