Lincoln, the Greatest Man of the Nineteenth CenturyMacmillan, 1922 - 77 pages |
From inside the book
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Page 12
... Seward and Chase and Stanton did their appointed work and they did it well . Grant and Sherman and Farragut accomplished their terrible task with thoroughness . Henry Ward Beecher , William Lloyd Garrison and Harriet Beecher Stowe , to ...
... Seward and Chase and Stanton did their appointed work and they did it well . Grant and Sherman and Farragut accomplished their terrible task with thoroughness . Henry Ward Beecher , William Lloyd Garrison and Harriet Beecher Stowe , to ...
Page 45
... Seward and Stanton in the stress of war times . It was one of the ways in which Lincoln sought a momen- tary relief from the severe mental strain of his high office . There is something about the psy- chology of an average American ...
... Seward and Stanton in the stress of war times . It was one of the ways in which Lincoln sought a momen- tary relief from the severe mental strain of his high office . There is something about the psy- chology of an average American ...
Page 52
... Seward . He was the son of William H. Seward , our Secretary of State during the Civil War . He was acting Secretary of State during his fa- ther's illness . One day in the Captain's room Mr. Frederick Seward related to a small group of ...
... Seward . He was the son of William H. Seward , our Secretary of State during the Civil War . He was acting Secretary of State during his fa- ther's illness . One day in the Captain's room Mr. Frederick Seward related to a small group of ...
Page 59
... Seward , Chase , Stanton , Gideon Welles , and almost every other man of the period seemed at times to have his own little ax to grind whenever the public grindstone was not otherwise engaged- and sometimes , alas , when it was . Among ...
... Seward , Chase , Stanton , Gideon Welles , and almost every other man of the period seemed at times to have his own little ax to grind whenever the public grindstone was not otherwise engaged- and sometimes , alas , when it was . Among ...
Other editions - View all
Lincoln, the Greatest Man of the Nineteenth Century Charles Reynolds Brown No preview available - 2012 |
Common terms and phrases
a-horseback or a-foot abolitionist Abraham Lincoln American Appomattox army asked to speak barn door bringing things Cabinet coln colored race combination of lofty common Confederacy deeper underlying principles discussion election element extreme views father feeling Frederick W Fremont front the deeper fugitive slaves Gate of Heaven ginia Goethe guiding them steadily Henry Ward Beecher Horace Greeley human idealism with practical Illinois insisted John Jasper Judge Douglas judgment knew knocked and St leadership lived lofty idealism Mahone McClellan mind moral name of Abraham negro Nineteenth Cen Nineteenth Century North northern organic evolution political unselfish Potomac practical sagacity preservation President reëlection of Lincoln Republican Party Richmond Robert E sagacity in bringing save the Union scolded Secretaries sense Seward Slidell South Southern struggle teenth Century things to pass tion touch the heart tury United voted Wendell Phillips Whig Party whole words York Tribune