A Voice from South CarolinaWalker, Evans & Cogswell, 1879 - 231 páginas |
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Página 18
... fully recognized and gauranteed in the fundamental law of the land , and that all efforts at its abolition were really acts of disloyalty to the government . Yet an anti- slavery sentiment did spring up , at first confined to those ...
... fully recognized and gauranteed in the fundamental law of the land , and that all efforts at its abolition were really acts of disloyalty to the government . Yet an anti- slavery sentiment did spring up , at first confined to those ...
Página 27
... fully appre- ciate them , and form a just conception how nearly those clothed in human forms can personate devils . incarnate . If he had once lived in ease and luxury in those favored sea islands , or if his home had once been in the ...
... fully appre- ciate them , and form a just conception how nearly those clothed in human forms can personate devils . incarnate . If he had once lived in ease and luxury in those favored sea islands , or if his home had once been in the ...
Página 37
... fully com- plied with , and the State fully equipped for a new de- parture . Her citizens once more began to breathe freely , and hopes for the future began , at last , to loom up before them . Unfortunately , all this was soon clouded ...
... fully com- plied with , and the State fully equipped for a new de- parture . Her citizens once more began to breathe freely , and hopes for the future began , at last , to loom up before them . Unfortunately , all this was soon clouded ...
Página 46
... He thus had an open field for the inauguration of all his measures . But , as these developed more fully , and * See Appendix - passim . the prospect of relief grew more and more faint , 46 A VOICE FROM SOUTH CAROLINA .
... He thus had an open field for the inauguration of all his measures . But , as these developed more fully , and * See Appendix - passim . the prospect of relief grew more and more faint , 46 A VOICE FROM SOUTH CAROLINA .
Página 51
... fully organized at that time , and that the colored votes , in fact , outnumbered the whites . It , therefore , presented a fair field for the introduc- tion and manipulation of all their party contrivances , and the excitement soon ...
... fully organized at that time , and that the colored votes , in fact , outnumbered the whites . It , therefore , presented a fair field for the introduc- tion and manipulation of all their party contrivances , and the excitement soon ...
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Términos y frases comunes
afterwards already amount appointed arms arrest Attorney-General became bills Blue Ridge Railroad bonds called Capt captain Cardozo carpet-baggers centennial CHAPTER Charleston Circuit citizens colored Columbia Committee Congress conspiracy constabulary constitution convicted course Court court-house D. H. Chamberlain Dahomey Democratic dollars election Ellenton fact favor force frauds Freedman's Bureau friends funds furnished Governor habeas corpus Hampton hands head heart House indictment jail Joe Crews Judge jury Kimpton Ku-Klux ladies Laurens County leaders Legislature Leland M. C. Butler majority marched martial law Massachusetts ment Merrill military morning Moses negro never night oath once outrages paid for printing Parker party passed Patterson political President prisoners promptly quietly race Radical scalawags Scott scrip secure seemed Senate session Simpson soon South Carolina tion Treasury Union United votes Wade Hampton Wallace Washington Whipper whites whole Winchester rifles witnesses writer
Pasajes populares
Página 95 - Like the vase in which roses have once been distilled — You may break, you may shatter the vase if you will, But the scent of the roses will hang round it still.
Página 145 - Th' insulting tyrant, prancing o'er the field Strow'd with Rome's citizens, and drench'd in slaughter, His horse's hoofs wet with Patrician blood ! Oh, Portius ! is there not some chosen curse, Some hidden thunder in the stores of heaven, Red with uncommon wrath, to blast the man, Who owes his greatness to his country's ruin ? PORTIUS.
Página 21 - That there was a cause, and an adequate cause, might be presumed from the character of the Convention which passed the Ordinance of Secession, and the perfect unanimity with which it was done.
Página 23 - That such an assembly should have inaugurated and completed a radical revolution in all the external relations of the State, in the face of acknowledged dangers, and at the risk of enormous sacrifices, and should have done it gravely, soberly, dispassionately, deliberately, and yet have done it without cause, transcends all the measures of probability. Whatever else may be said of it, it certainly must be admitted that this solemn act of South Carolina was well considered.
Página 22 - It was a noble body, and all their proceedings were in harmony with their high character. In the midst of intense agitation and excitement, they were calm, cool, collected, and self-possessed. They deliberated without passion, and concluded without rashness. They sat with closed doors, that the tumult of the populace might not invade the sobriety of their minds.
Página 16 - ... walls As if that soul were fled. So sleeps the pride of former days, So glory's thrill is o'er, And hearts that once beat high for praise Now feel that pulse no more. No more to chiefs and ladies bright The harp of Tara swells : The chord alone, that breaks at night, Its tale of ruin tells. Thus Freedom now so seldom wakes, The only throb she gives Is when some heart indignant breaks, To show that still she lives.
Página 178 - JOHN HAMPDEN, Who, with great spirit and consummate abilities, began a noble opposition to an arbitrary court, in defence of the liberties of his country ; supported them in parliament, and died for them in the field.
Página 21 - There were men in that convention utterly incapable of low and selfish schemes, who, in the calm serenity of their judgments, were as unmoved by the waves of popular passion and excitement, as the everlasting granite by the billows that roll against it. There were men there who would...
Página 22 - ... and all their proceedings were in harmony with their high character. In the midst of intense agitation and excitement, they were calm, cool, collected and self-possessed. They deliberated without passion, and concluded without rashness. They sat with closed doors, that the tumult of the populace might not invade the sobriety of their minds. 'If a stranger could have passed from the stirring scenes with which the streets of Charleston were alive, into the calm and quiet sanctuary of this venerable...