The Quarterly Review, 111. köideJohn Murray, 1862 |
From inside the book
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Page 216
... Confederation of the Rhine , upon very easy terms . To all these treaties England was a consenting party . Neither the promise which secured Norway to Bernadotte , nor that which re - introduced Austria into Italy , nor those which ...
... Confederation of the Rhine , upon very easy terms . To all these treaties England was a consenting party . Neither the promise which secured Norway to Bernadotte , nor that which re - introduced Austria into Italy , nor those which ...
Page 232
... Confederacy in the labyrinth of counter- revolution . If he will not , you may then run greater risks ; but even then I should wish to see more evident proofs of active disposition to throw off B.'s yoke , before I encouraged an effort ...
... Confederacy in the labyrinth of counter- revolution . If he will not , you may then run greater risks ; but even then I should wish to see more evident proofs of active disposition to throw off B.'s yoke , before I encouraged an effort ...
Page 239
... Confederate States were correct in the view they respectively took as to the right of any State or States to secede from the Union . The question has passed from the jurist to the soldier , and will be decided not by argument but the ...
... Confederate States were correct in the view they respectively took as to the right of any State or States to secede from the Union . The question has passed from the jurist to the soldier , and will be decided not by argument but the ...
Page 240
... States , not from any love for slavery , but because with- out such confederates they could not hope to make head on any question It is question in Congress against their Republican opponents . 240 The American Crisis .
... States , not from any love for slavery , but because with- out such confederates they could not hope to make head on any question It is question in Congress against their Republican opponents . 240 The American Crisis .
Page 252
... Confederate States assert that they are guilty of neither treason , nor rebellion , nor revolt ; and that they had as much right to withdraw from the Union , if they pleased , as other States have to elect to remain in it . Whatever may ...
... Confederate States assert that they are guilty of neither treason , nor rebellion , nor revolt ; and that they had as much right to withdraw from the Union , if they pleased , as other States have to elect to remain in it . Whatever may ...
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Althing ancient Apuleius archipelago Austria authority Bishop boys Bridport British cause century character Christian classes clergy Commissioners Confederate Constitution Corfe Castle danger declared Dorset doubt duty effect empire England Europe European evil fact favour feeling force foreign France give Gizur Government Holy Holy Orders honour House hymns Iceland important influence instruction interest island Java King labour less London Lord Castlereagh Lord Eldon means ment miles mind Minister Miss Knight nature never Njal's Saga North once Ottoman Empire party passed Pitt Pitt's political population Porte possessed present Prince principles question railway reforms religious respect Russia schools seems ships slavery society South Spain spirit Sultan Swanage Syria things Thornbury Thornbury's tion train truth Turkey Turkish Turner Union vessel Weymouth whole words young