| Evert Augustus Duyckinck, George Long Duyckinck - American literature - 1855 - 294 pages
...children, Avho have received unmerited blows from a beloved parent. Let us complain to our parent ; but kt our complaints speak at the same time the language of affliction and veneration." Thus early in the field in defence of American constitutional liberty was John Dickinson. In 1774,... | |
| Evert Augustus Duyckinck - 1855 - 718 pages
...children, who have received unmerited blows from a beloved parent. Let us complain to our parent ; but lot our complaints speak at the same time the language of affliction and veneration." Thin early in the field in defence of American constitutional liberty was John Dickinson. In 1774,... | |
| Evert Augustus Duyckinck, George Long Duyckinck - American literature - 1856 - 704 pages
...Revolution. " We have," he writes, " a generous, sensible, and humane nation, to whom we may apply. Let us behave like dutiful children, who have received...same time the language of affliction and veneration." Thus early in the field in defence of American constitutional liberty was John Dickinson. In 1774,... | |
| Evert Augustus Duyckinck - 1866 - 714 pages
...Revolution. " We have," he writes, " a generous, sensible, and humane nation, to whom we may apply. Let us behave like dutiful children, who have received...same time the language of affliction and veneration." Thin early in the field in defence of American constitutional liberty was John Dickinson. In 1774,... | |
| William Crawford Armor - Governors - 1872 - 600 pages
...dutiful children who have received unmerited blows from a beloved parent. Let us complain to our parents; but let our complaints speak at the same time the language of affection and veneration." At a meeting held in Faneuil Hall, Boston, soon after their publication,... | |
| Samuel Eliot - United States - 1873 - 524 pages
...Dickinson, a native of Maryland, and a representative of Pennsylvania, in his Letters from a Farmer, " but let our complaints speak at the same time the language of affliction 17 and veneration," (1767.) The beginning of the next year (1768) brought out the sterner voice of... | |
| Samuel Eliot - United States - 1876 - 538 pages
...inson, a native of Maryland, and a representative of Pennsylvania, in his Letters from a Farmer, " but let our complaints speak at the same time the language of affliction 15* and veneration," (1767.) The beginning of the next year (1768) brought out the sterner voice of... | |
| Samuel Eliot - United States - 1874 - 544 pages
...inson, a native of Maryland, and a representative of Pennsylvania, in his Letters from a Farmer, " but let our complaints speak at the same time the language of affliction and veneration," (1767.) The beginning of the next year (1768) brought out the sterner voice of Massachusetts through... | |
| Historical Society of Pennsylvania - Bibliography - 1895 - 538 pages
...like dutiful children, who have received unmerited blows from a beloved parent. Let us complain to cur parent; but let our complaints speak at the same time...affairs, that our applications to his Majesty and the par* Clean was a popular firebrand of Athens, and Clodius of Rome; each of whom plunged his country... | |
| M. Katherine Jackson - American literature - 1906 - 210 pages
...however, it shall happen by an unfortunate course of affairs, that our applications to his Majesty . . . prove ineffectual, let us then take another step,...advantages she has been used to receive from us." He showed the value of the colonies to England and the need of a liberal policy in trade, being of... | |
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