LincolnNelson Doubleday, Incorporated, 1924 - 124 páginas |
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... thoughts , but when he had once hit upon the word or phrase he never forgot it . " He read less and thought more than any man in the country , " says Herndon with a sort of pride , and it should be remem- bered that throughout his ...
... thoughts , but when he had once hit upon the word or phrase he never forgot it . " He read less and thought more than any man in the country , " says Herndon with a sort of pride , and it should be remem- bered that throughout his ...
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... thought needed to be told . " No description could be more noble . 66 That Lincoln's gift of humor added much to the vividness and homely naturalness of his style will not be questioned . But the connec . tion between fair - mindedness ...
... thought needed to be told . " No description could be more noble . 66 That Lincoln's gift of humor added much to the vividness and homely naturalness of his style will not be questioned . But the connec . tion between fair - mindedness ...
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... thought to include all ; but now , to aid in making the bondage of the negro universal and eternal , it is assailed and sneered at and construed , and hawked at and torn , till , if its framers could rise from their graves , they could ...
... thought to include all ; but now , to aid in making the bondage of the negro universal and eternal , it is assailed and sneered at and construed , and hawked at and torn , till , if its framers could rise from their graves , they could ...
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... thought the Declaration promised some- thing better than the condition of British sub- jects ; but no , it only meant that we should be equal to them in their own oppressed and un- equal condition . According to that , it gave no ...
... thought the Declaration promised some- thing better than the condition of British sub- jects ; but no , it only meant that we should be equal to them in their own oppressed and un- equal condition . According to that , it gave no ...
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... thought it impolitic to utter the senti- ment that the " government cannot endure per- manently half slave and half free . " For the immediate purpose of that campaign they were right , for this paragraph , in the opin- ion of many good ...
... thought it impolitic to utter the senti- ment that the " government cannot endure per- manently half slave and half free . " For the immediate purpose of that campaign they were right , for this paragraph , in the opin- ion of many good ...
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Términos y frases comunes
Abraham Baldwin ABRAHAM LINCOLN affirmed amendments BERNARD BARTON better BLISS PERRY called Congress Constitution Court day's pleasuring dear death Declaration Douglas Dred Scott decision election Elia Emancipation Proclamation Executive Govern Executive Mansion express fathers who framed Federal authority Federal Government Federal Territories feel Fleet Street forbade the Federal force framed the government friends Government to control hope indorse labor LAMB Lamb's Lecompton constitution LINCOLN live look McClellan ment mind nation nature Nebraska Nebraska bill negro never oath old familiar faces passed person pleasure poor present President principle prohibit slavery proper division Quaker question Republican seemed Skiddaw slave slavery in Federal sort speak speech spirit stitution Street thee things thirty-nine thou thought tion true truth understanding Union United voted Washington Whigs whole WILLIAM WORDSWORTH words