LincolnNelson Doubleday, Incorporated, 1924 - 124 páginas |
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Página 35
... question of slavery to one of a mere right of property ; and as such , how can he oppose the foreign slave- trade ? How can he refuse that trade in that " property " shall be " perfectly free , " unless he does it as a protection to the ...
... question of slavery to one of a mere right of property ; and as such , how can he oppose the foreign slave- trade ? How can he refuse that trade in that " property " shall be " perfectly free , " unless he does it as a protection to the ...
Página 37
... question just as well , and even better , than we do now . I fully indorse this , and I adopt it as a text for this discourse . I so adopt it because it fur- nishes a precise and an agreed starting - point for a discussion between ...
... question just as well , and even better , than we do now . I fully indorse this , and I adopt it as a text for this discourse . I so adopt it because it fur- nishes a precise and an agreed starting - point for a discussion between ...
Página 38
... question mentioned ? What is the frame of government under which we live ? The answer must be , " The Constitu- tion of the United States . " That Constitution consists of the original , framed in 1787 , and under which the present ...
... question mentioned ? What is the frame of government under which we live ? The answer must be , " The Constitu- tion of the United States . " That Constitution consists of the original , framed in 1787 , and under which the present ...
Página 39
... question - is precisely what the text declares our fathers understood ' better than we . " Let us now inquire whether the " thirty- nine , " or any of them , ever acted upon this question ; and if they did , how they acted upon it - how ...
... question - is precisely what the text declares our fathers understood ' better than we . " Let us now inquire whether the " thirty- nine , " or any of them , ever acted upon this question ; and if they did , how they acted upon it - how ...
Página 40
... question . They were William Blount and Wil . liam Few ; and they both voted for the pro- hibition - thus showing that in their under- standing no line dividing local from Federal authority , nor anything else , properly forbade the ...
... question . They were William Blount and Wil . liam Few ; and they both voted for the pro- hibition - thus showing that in their under- standing no line dividing local from Federal authority , nor anything else , properly forbade the ...
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Términos y frases comunes
appear authority believe better bring called common Congress Constitution Court dear death decision election equal express face fact fathers Federal feel force framed friends give half hands heart hold hope John Judge keep kind labor LAMB least leave less light LINCOLN live look master means ment mind nature never object once opinion original passed person pleasure poor present President principle prohibition proper Quaker question reason remember Republican respects rest seemed seen sense side slave slavery sort speak speech spirit stand Street supposed sure Territories thee things thou thought tion true truth understanding Union United voted Washington weeks whole wish wrong