The United States of North America as They areW. Simpkin and R. Marshall, 1828 - 242 páginas |
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Página 164
... can be no doubt , that the * Unitarianism in the United States , especially the Western , is pure Deism , and not as in England a partial belief in revelation . prosperity of the Union , as a State , is 164 [ Chap . XI . THE UNITED STATES.
... can be no doubt , that the * Unitarianism in the United States , especially the Western , is pure Deism , and not as in England a partial belief in revelation . prosperity of the Union , as a State , is 164 [ Chap . XI . THE UNITED STATES.
Página 165
... Deism . Where the barriers erected for the security of the individual are so few , and so easily to be overcome , -where none of those general ties called national habits , love of country , or vene- ration for the Constitution are to ...
... Deism . Where the barriers erected for the security of the individual are so few , and so easily to be overcome , -where none of those general ties called national habits , love of country , or vene- ration for the Constitution are to ...
Página 167
... Deism , as being the most convenient , is generally found to prevail . For this reason the majority of its citizens are devoid of honesty , the State is without credit , its laws * In the summer of 1825 , four Kentuckians crossed the ...
... Deism , as being the most convenient , is generally found to prevail . For this reason the majority of its citizens are devoid of honesty , the State is without credit , its laws * In the summer of 1825 , four Kentuckians crossed the ...
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acres Adams Adams's administration affairs American amongst Andrew Jackson brandy Britain candidate certainly character church cities citizen Clay congregation Congress Congress of Panama Constitution county-town course Crawford Deism Democrats distance dress election elegant endeavoured England English Episcopalian established Europe exhibit expected expenses farmer fashionable Federalists feeling fellow-citizens foreign four friends gentlemen German Holy Alliance honour horses hundred dollars inhabitants interest Jackson John Bull John Quincy Adams Jonathan Kentuckian Kentucky ladies land lawyer less liberty manner means ment merchant military militia ministers nation neighbours never object occasions officers Ohio opinion Orleans party Pennsylvania Philadelphia Pittsburgh political popular population possession preachers Presbyterian present President principles religion Representatives republican Republics respect Secretary secure settler spirit style sufficiently Synods talents thousand dollars tion Tories town Treaty of Ghent twenty Union United votes Washington wealth Western whisky Yankee York
Pasajes populares
Página 4 - Europe has a set of primary interests, which to us have none, or a very remote, relation.
Página 5 - The inducements of interest for observing that conduct will best be referred to your own reflections and experience. With me, a predominant motive has been to endeavour to gain time to our country to settle and mature its yet recent institutions, and to progress without interruption to that degree of strength and consistency, which is necessary to give it, humanly speaking, the command of its own fortunes.
Página 5 - It is our true policy to steer clear of permanent alliances with any portion of the foreign world...
Página 2 - Sir, your papers are forged ; there is no such port as Pittsburg in the world : your vessel must be confiscated.' The trembling captain laid before the officer the map of the United States, directed him to the Gulf of Mexico, pointed out the mouth of the Mississippi, led him a thousand miles up it to the mouth of the Ohio, and thence another thousand up it to Pittsburg : ' There, sir, is the port from whence my vessel cleared out' The astonished officer, before he had seen the map, would as readily...
Página 35 - That we should consider any attempt on the part of European powers to extend their system to any portion of this hemisphere as dangerous to our peace and safety...
Página 113 - ... the American people have such a high degree of self esteem to the absence of a real populace. But where does the American obtain this knowledge of politics, the power to partake in the great events of the state? The main source is the press. This Sealsfield expresses in the following words: ""Of the most important bulwark of a nation's liberty, the freedom of the press, no people make a more extensive use than the Americans," and farther on : "The 28 Morton, pt.
Página 21 - ... obnoxious to the freedom of a nation. His style, a mixture of the elegant and the diplomatic, is admired, because it is new to the United States. It cannot be denied, that it is the most fit to disguise his political opinions and his deep-laid schemes. This motive and his predilection for everything coming from the eastern courts, may sufficiently account for his adoption of and fondness for it. If taken upon the whole, he may be considered a most dangerous man to the freedom of the Union, and...
Página 17 - At a late day of the present session an appeal was made by the Speaker of the House of Representatives, in his official character, requesting an investigation of some charges that had been made against him by a member of Congress from the State of Pennsylvania, which appeared in the character of a letter in one of the public journals of that State. A motion was submitted to appoint a special committee for the investigation of the subject, which, after consuming two days in discussion, was adopted....
Página 90 - Tories, whereas the Congress of the United States, is an assembly of brokers, s'ent by their respective States not to promote the welfare of the Union, but of their own mean and sordid interests. One is expected to bring the turnpike through his county, another a canal, a third is to procure a lighthouse, a fourth an academy, or a deaf and dumb asylum. These are the important affairs committed to the representatives : if they succeed, messenger-like, in the execution of their errands, they are called...
Página 40 - ... and until positive information has been received of the ulterior views of Spain, in regard to her American possessions, of her decision upon the proposition of the United States, and of the opinions of her allies in relation to the same subject, Russia cannot give a definitive answer.