The Southern Quarterly Review, Volume 5Daniel Kimball Whitaker, Milton Clapp, William Gilmore Simms, James Henley Thornwell E. H. Britton, 1965 - American periodicals |
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Page 368
... language . No man knows better the precise import of the words he uses . The difficulty is not in him , but in his ... language of the Constitution is irreconcilable with the idea of its be- ing a compact , is taken from that portion of ...
... language . No man knows better the precise import of the words he uses . The difficulty is not in him , but in his ... language of the Constitution is irreconcilable with the idea of its be- ing a compact , is taken from that portion of ...
Page 369
... language which he now considers as implying supe- riority , was taken verbatim from it . If he had extended his researches still farther , he would have found that it is the habitual language used in treaties , whenever a stipulation is ...
... language which he now considers as implying supe- riority , was taken verbatim from it . If he had extended his researches still farther , he would have found that it is the habitual language used in treaties , whenever a stipulation is ...
Page 423
... language which we still adopt as spirit assumes body and shape . And if we attentively examine into the origin and progress of our knowledge , we shall discover that , gen- erally , with but few exceptions , remarkable resemblances in ...
... language which we still adopt as spirit assumes body and shape . And if we attentively examine into the origin and progress of our knowledge , we shall discover that , gen- erally , with but few exceptions , remarkable resemblances in ...
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