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 103
... present age is fruitful in philosophies , which possess the merit of ingenuity and novelty at least , if not of certain- ty and soundness . It is only to open our eyes and to stretch our ears , and strange writings appear upon the wall ...
... present age is fruitful in philosophies , which possess the merit of ingenuity and novelty at least , if not of certain- ty and soundness . It is only to open our eyes and to stretch our ears , and strange writings appear upon the wall ...
Page 141
... present condition of the Indian tribes . This great diversity , however , allows greater latitude for our hopes ; but , when we consider the diminishing num- bers of the Indian population , we find a lamentable agree- ment in all the ...
... present condition of the Indian tribes . This great diversity , however , allows greater latitude for our hopes ; but , when we consider the diminishing num- bers of the Indian population , we find a lamentable agree- ment in all the ...
Page 152
... present furnishes a more mournful spectacle than the past . The fate of the Pelasgians is that which we may anticipate for the North - American Indians . What , in the former in- stance , is known to us by dim legends and uncertain ...
... present furnishes a more mournful spectacle than the past . The fate of the Pelasgians is that which we may anticipate for the North - American Indians . What , in the former in- stance , is known to us by dim legends and uncertain ...
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