| 1836 - 694 páginas
...much humble virtue, and so many useful arts, has never been filled. " What the loss of the Huegonots was to commerce and manufactures in France, that of...to religion, literature, and amenity, in America. The silken threads were drawn out of the mixed web of society, which has ever since been comparatively... | |
| Anne MacVicar Grant - 1836 - 364 páginas
...much humble virtue, and so many useful arts, has never been filled. What the loss of the Huegonots was to commerce and manufactures in France, that of...to religion, literature, and amenity, in America. The silken threads were drawn out of the mixed web of society, which has ever since been comparatively... | |
| 1870 - 612 páginas
...execution, it has occasioned to the country an irreparable privation. What the loss of the Huguenots was to commerce and manufactures in France, that of...was to religion, literature, and amenity in America. The silken threads were drawn out of the mixed web of society, which has ever since been comparatively... | |
| 1870 - 694 páginas
...execution, it has occasioned to the country an irreparable privation. What the loss of the Huguenots was to commerce and manufactures in France, that of...was to religion, literature, and amenity in America. The silken threads were drawn out of the mixed web of society, which has ever since been comparatively... | |
| William Leete Stone - 1872 - 1008 páginas
...execution, it has occasioned to the country an irreparable privation. What the loss of the Huguenots was to commerce and manufactures in France, that of...was to religion, literature, and amenity in America. The silken threads were drawn out of the mixed web of society, which has ever since been comparatively... | |
| 1896 - 590 páginas
...aneedotes of the Indians. Her pronounced toryism makes the book at this time all the more piquant. "What the loss of the Huguenots," she remarks, "was...manufactures in France, that of the loyalists was to the religion, literature, and amenity of America.'' The second and third editions appeared m London... | |
| Merle Eugene Curti - 970 páginas
...Huguenots was to commerce and manufactures in France," wrote a former English resident in the colonies, "that of the Loyalists was to religion, literature, and amenity, in America. The silken threads were drawn out of the mixed web of society, which has ever since been comparatively... | |
| Anne MacVicar Grant - 1909 - 648 páginas
...much humble virtue, and so many useful arts, has never been filled. What the loss of the Huguenots was to commerce and manufactures in France, that of...to religion, literature, and amenity, in America. The silken threads were drawn out of the mixed web of society, which has ever since been comparatively... | |
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