| John Quincy Adams - 1841 - 140 páginas
...in the distress I feel both for myself and my clients, consolation from two sources — first, that the rights of my clients to their lives and liberties...leaves me scarcely anything to say, and I feel that such full justice has been done to their interests, that any fault or imperfection of mine will merely... | |
| Edward Royall Tyler, William Lathrop Kingsley, George Park Fisher, Timothy Dwight - 1863 - 878 páginas
...upon our shores, and found in the condition of freemen within the territorial limits of a FREE AND SOVEREIGN STATE." Of that argument John Quincy Adams...defended by my learned friend and colleague in so Me and complete a manner as leaves me scarcely anything to say, and I feel that snchfull justice has... | |
| William A. Owens - 1997 - 372 páginas
...in the distress I feel both for myself and my clients, consolation from two sources— first, that the rights of my clients to their lives and liberties...leaves me scarcely anything to say, and I feel that such full justice has been done to their interests that any fault or imperfection of mine will merely... | |
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