| 1819 - 480 páginas
...established independence to this day, nil the Indian wars with which we have been afflicted have bi-en distinctly traceable to the instigation of English...never before punished. Two of them, offenders of the deep est dve, after solemn warning to their government, and individually to one of them, have fallen,... | |
| 1824 - 48 páginas
...of our established independence to this day, (ill the Indian wars with which we have been afllicted, have been distinctly traceable to the instigation...but never before punished. Two of them, offenders of thu deepest dye, after solemn warning to their government* and individually to one of them, have fallen,... | |
| United States. Congress - 1855 - 726 páginas
...be punished and arrested. Great Britain yet engages the alliance and co-operation of savages in war; but her Government has invariably disclaimed all countenance...Government, and individually to one of them, have fallen, Jiagrante delicto, into the hands of an American General; and the punishment inflicted upon them has... | |
| United States. Congress - 1855 - 728 páginas
...be punished and arrested. Great Britain yet engages the alliance and co-operation of savages in war; but her Government has invariably disclaimed all countenance...Government, and individually to one of them, have fallen, Jtagrante delicto, into the hands of an American General; and the punishment inflicted upon them has... | |
| United States. Congress - 1855 - 726 páginas
...invariably disclaimed all countenance or authorization to her subjects to instigate them against us in lime of peace. Yet, so it has happened, that, from the...Always disavowed, yet always felt ; more than once delected, but never before punished ; two of them, offenders of the deepest dye, after solemn warning... | |
| Hubert Bruce Fuller - 1906 - 436 páginas
...be punished and arrested. Great Britain yet engages the alliance and ceoperation of savages in war. But her government has invariably disclaimed all countenance...government, and individually to one of them, have fallen, Jlagrante delicto, into the hands of an American general; and the punishment inflicted upon them has... | |
| Richard Drinnon - 1997 - 614 páginas
...believed they were childishly incapable, by themselves, of bringing it to bear on white enemies: "It so happened, that, from the period of our established...to the instigation of English traders or agents." Retributive justice therefore demanded the lives of leading warriors taken in arms, "and, still more,... | |
| Alexander Saxton - 2003 - 424 páginas
...had England by proxy before the bar of justice, Adams moved from the particular to the general. '... all the Indian wars with which we have been afflicted...yet always felt; more than once detected but never punished; two of them . . . have fallen, flagrante delicto, into the hands of an American general'... | |
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