The Southern Quarterly Review, Volume 30Daniel Kimball Whitaker, Milton Clapp, William Gilmore Simms, James Henley Thornwell 1856 |
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Page 3
... admired in ignorance a proceeding in which it was impossible to discover any increase of values or productions comparable to the profits which had been acquired by the winners of the game . At length the veil is lifted , and we are ...
... admired in ignorance a proceeding in which it was impossible to discover any increase of values or productions comparable to the profits which had been acquired by the winners of the game . At length the veil is lifted , and we are ...
Page 7
... admiring the change , with the crowd of unre- flecting and unsuspicious eulogists , we will endeavour to under- stand it , and , if possible , to explain its character and auguries . That all wealth is only transmuted and consolidated ...
... admiring the change , with the crowd of unre- flecting and unsuspicious eulogists , we will endeavour to under- stand it , and , if possible , to explain its character and auguries . That all wealth is only transmuted and consolidated ...
Page 14
... admired . But there is only too much justice in the remark , that " Speculation , cultivated for the sake of further speculation , without thought of any increase of production - in fine , agio for the sake of agio alone- enters into ...
... admired . But there is only too much justice in the remark , that " Speculation , cultivated for the sake of further speculation , without thought of any increase of production - in fine , agio for the sake of agio alone- enters into ...
Page 36
... admiration for the hero described is more enthusiastically exhibited than by any preceding biographer ; the various topics are marshalled and dwelt upon with artistic felicity and tact ; and while the elements of poetry and eloquence ...
... admiration for the hero described is more enthusiastically exhibited than by any preceding biographer ; the various topics are marshalled and dwelt upon with artistic felicity and tact ; and while the elements of poetry and eloquence ...
Page 37
... admired author on the present occasion . His book is very much more , and promises , too , to be still very much more than " The Life of George Washington . " Now , it is most true that we , and as we believe , everybody else would ...
... admired author on the present occasion . His book is very much more , and promises , too , to be still very much more than " The Life of George Washington . " Now , it is most true that we , and as we believe , everybody else would ...
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Common terms and phrases
admiration Africa Ampelakia ancient Aristotle Athenian Athens Brooks called cause character Christian Cicero civilization coin colonies common consequence constitution doctrine dollars Duchess of Parma effect Egmont Emile PĂ©reire equal Europe evil existence fact faculties favour feeling Fichte force France give gold Greece Greek Grote heat heathen history of Greece honour human idea important individual induction influence interest knowledge labour Liberia liberty logic Maimonides means ment method mind missionary modern moral nations nature never noble object opinion Orange original pantheism Philip philosophy Plato political present Prince of Orange principle production question Rabbi race Randolph reason rendered result says Schelling silver slavery slaves society soul South South Carolina Sparta speculation spirit success tendency things thought tion trade treatise true truth universal Washington whole William of Orange