American Thought and Writing: The Revolution and the early RepublicRussel Blaine Nye, Norman S. Grabo Houghton Mifflin, 1965 |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-3 de 46
Página 29
... happiness . When the appeal is made to the sword , highly probable is it , that the punishment will exceed the offense ; and the calamities attending on war outweigh those preceding it . These considerations of justice and prudence will ...
... happiness . When the appeal is made to the sword , highly probable is it , that the punishment will exceed the offense ; and the calamities attending on war outweigh those preceding it . These considerations of justice and prudence will ...
Página 78
... happiness being extremely dear to me , will always constitute no inconsiderable part of my own . Impressed with the liveliest sensibility on this pleasing occasion , I will claim the indulgence of dilating the more copiously on the ...
... happiness being extremely dear to me , will always constitute no inconsiderable part of my own . Impressed with the liveliest sensibility on this pleasing occasion , I will claim the indulgence of dilating the more copiously on the ...
Página 243
... happiness . Virtue and vice are the only things in this world which , with our souls , are capable of surviving death ; the former is the rational and only procur- ing cause of all intellectual happiness , and the latter of conscious ...
... happiness . Virtue and vice are the only things in this world which , with our souls , are capable of surviving death ; the former is the rational and only procur- ing cause of all intellectual happiness , and the latter of conscious ...
Contenido
INTRODUCTION | xi |
A NOTE ON THE TEXTS | xxxix |
Jonathan Mayhew | 3 |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras 41 secciones no mostradas
Términos y frases comunes
Adams Age of Reason American ANDRÉ army authority believe Britain British called cause character Charles Brockden Brown Charlotte Temple citizens civil colonies colonists common Congress constitution Convention danger Declaration defend Deism democracy duty effect election elective monarchy enemies England equal established Europe evil existence experience faction force foreign France Franklin French Revolution give governors happiness heaven hereditary honor human ideas independence interest Jefferson Joel Barlow John John Adams John Dickinson justice king language laws letter liberty mankind means ment mind monarchy moral nation nature never object opinion oppression Paine Parliament passions peace Pennsylvania persons Philadelphia Philip Freneau political present principles reason religion republic republican respect Revolution Samuel Adams sense society spirit TEXT things Thomas Jefferson Thomas Paine thou thought tion truth union United virtue whole wisdom writing wrote