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,... A Voice from South Carolina - Página 23por John A. Leland - 1879 - 231 páginasVista completa - Acerca de este libro
| Benjamin Morgan Palmer - 1875 - 632 páginas
...sternest necessities of justice and of right. That such an assembly should have inaugurated and completed a radical revolution in all the external relations...solemn act of South Carolina was well considered. In her estimate of the magnitude of the danger, she has been seconded by every other slaveholding State.... | |
| Benjamin Morgan Palmer - 1875 - 648 páginas
...sternest necessities of justice and of right. That such an assembly should have inaugurated and completed a radical revolution in all the external relations...dispassionately, deliberately, and yet have done it without causV, transcends all the measures of probability. Whatever else may be said of it, it certainly must... | |
| Yates Snowden, Harry Gardner Cutler - 1920 - 632 páginas
...veneration which subdued the rude Gaul, when he first beheld, in senatorial dignity, the Conscript Fathers of Rome. "That in such a body there was not a single...solemn act of South Carolina was well considered." THE DECLARATION OF CAUSES Immediately after the proclation of the Ordinance of Secession, so simple,... | |
| Yates Snowden, Harry Gardner Cutler - 1920 - 628 páginas
...senatorial dignity, the Conscript Fathers of Rome. "That in such a body there was not a single yote against the Ordinance of Secession ; that there was...solemn act of South Carolina was well considered." THE DECLARATION OF CAUSES Richardson, BH Rutledge, JE Jenkins and PE Duncan. It reviews the national... | |
| Jon L. Wakelyn - 1996 - 456 páginas
...assembly should have inaugurated and completed a radical revolution in all the external relations of State, in the face of acknowledged dangers, and at...solemn act of South Carolina was well considered. In her estimate of the magnitude of the danger, she has been seconded by every other slaveholding State.... | |
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