The Southern Review, 4권A. E. Miller., 1829 |
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38 페이지
... causes we have assigned : nor have we deemed it necessary to exhibit any spe- cimen beyond the continuous ten lines of whose Punic character no one doubts . In his Annotations , vol . iv . p . 598 , Bothe says , he has followed the ...
... causes we have assigned : nor have we deemed it necessary to exhibit any spe- cimen beyond the continuous ten lines of whose Punic character no one doubts . In his Annotations , vol . iv . p . 598 , Bothe says , he has followed the ...
64 페이지
... causes which were heard at the last sitting of the Supreme Court of the United States , and which are still held under advisement , the whole doctrine was very fully reviewed in the argument of counsel . We have rea- son to expect from ...
... causes which were heard at the last sitting of the Supreme Court of the United States , and which are still held under advisement , the whole doctrine was very fully reviewed in the argument of counsel . We have rea- son to expect from ...
65 페이지
... cause . It seems to be one of our favourite national amusements to pull down and put up our governments . No one among us , we believe , ever thought that if it pleased the majority of a people to indulge itself in an innocent ...
... cause . It seems to be one of our favourite national amusements to pull down and put up our governments . No one among us , we believe , ever thought that if it pleased the majority of a people to indulge itself in an innocent ...
73 페이지
... cause . The prompt and generous restitution of all the plundered monu- ments of Italian art , is a lesson on this subject never to be for- gotten . It may now be safely pronounced , that in no country can the arts be indebted for their ...
... cause . The prompt and generous restitution of all the plundered monu- ments of Italian art , is a lesson on this subject never to be for- gotten . It may now be safely pronounced , that in no country can the arts be indebted for their ...
75 페이지
... causes , were mere aristocracies , and the humblest of their citizens were degraded by prosperity , as Burke expresses it , " into the vices and follies of kings . " The fact that " city " and " state " were synonimous , was alone ...
... causes , were mere aristocracies , and the humblest of their citizens were degraded by prosperity , as Burke expresses it , " into the vices and follies of kings . " The fact that " city " and " state " were synonimous , was alone ...
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