Eloquence of the United States, Volym 3E. & H. Clark, 1827 |
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... nation . Whoev- er considers the object of this bill , to be any other than that , which has been avowed , is mistaken . Whoever believes this bill to be a means of peace or any thing else , than an instrument of vigorous and long ...
... nation . Whoev- er considers the object of this bill , to be any other than that , which has been avowed , is mistaken . Whoever believes this bill to be a means of peace or any thing else , than an instrument of vigorous and long ...
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... nation , whose army and navy were little more than nominal , should engage in war with a nation possessing one of the best appointed armies and the most powerful ma- rine on the globe ; that a country , to which neutrality had been a ...
... nation , whose army and navy were little more than nominal , should engage in war with a nation possessing one of the best appointed armies and the most powerful ma- rine on the globe ; that a country , to which neutrality had been a ...
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... nation may be disgrac- ed , and yet a cabinet attain its desired honors . All is clear . A country may be ruined , in making an admi- nistration happy . I said , Mr. Speaker , that such strange schemes , ap- parently irreconcilable to ...
... nation may be disgrac- ed , and yet a cabinet attain its desired honors . All is clear . A country may be ruined , in making an admi- nistration happy . I said , Mr. Speaker , that such strange schemes , ap- parently irreconcilable to ...
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... nations in the world , this nation is the last which ought to admit among its purposes the design of foreign conquests . States , such as are these , connect- ed by ties so peculiar , into whose combination there enters , necessarily ...
... nations in the world , this nation is the last which ought to admit among its purposes the design of foreign conquests . States , such as are these , connect- ed by ties so peculiar , into whose combination there enters , necessarily ...
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... nation , which understands what it owes to its own safety and honor . No nation can yield to threat what it might yield to a sense of interest ; be- cause , in that case , it has no credit for what it grants , and what is more , loses ...
... nation , which understands what it owes to its own safety and honor . No nation can yield to threat what it might yield to a sense of interest ; be- cause , in that case , it has no credit for what it grants , and what is more , loses ...
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