The American Whig Review, Volumen13Wiley and Putnam, 1851 |
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... period when it will bear hostile scrutiny , and deserve the younger Pitt roused all Europe against national approval , or be content to lose the modern Charlemagne , even when he within a very limited time even the taxes , was unable to ...
... period when it will bear hostile scrutiny , and deserve the younger Pitt roused all Europe against national approval , or be content to lose the modern Charlemagne , even when he within a very limited time even the taxes , was unable to ...
Página 3
... period of the Democratic party to abuse and despise them as a mob , and of the later and present periods to hoodwink them with Jesuitic phrases and plausible generalities taken from the English economic vernacular , and so use them ...
... period of the Democratic party to abuse and despise them as a mob , and of the later and present periods to hoodwink them with Jesuitic phrases and plausible generalities taken from the English economic vernacular , and so use them ...
Página 6
... period ; for in the uncertain state of our creditors in Europe , with the falling manufactures and increasing poverty of the country , there is no prophesying when the national industry may be driven into still greater difficulties ...
... period ; for in the uncertain state of our creditors in Europe , with the falling manufactures and increasing poverty of the country , there is no prophesying when the national industry may be driven into still greater difficulties ...
Página 7
... periods of famine in that country are ex- actly the periods of largest commercial intercourse with England . We have shown also , that if the population of Ireland is taken to be eight millions , that country produces food enough to ...
... periods of famine in that country are ex- actly the periods of largest commercial intercourse with England . We have shown also , that if the population of Ireland is taken to be eight millions , that country produces food enough to ...
Página 8
... period , and which men of all parties must entertain alike , is doubtless , whether the present governing powers of England shall be suffered to go on in the line of ruin which they have marked out for us and for herself ; whether we ...
... period , and which men of all parties must entertain alike , is doubtless , whether the present governing powers of England shall be suffered to go on in the line of ruin which they have marked out for us and for herself ; whether we ...
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Página 278 - ... us; and taking all these evidences, together with the violent animosity of a strong faction in the northern colonies against the southern, which needs only a little of the same...