The New-England Magazine, Band 2Joseph Tinker Buckingham, Edwin Buckingham, Samuel Gridley Howe, John Osborne Sargent, Park Benjamin J. T. and E. Buckingham, 1832 |
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... ment , in sad accents , or in sober silence , the irreparable flight of Time ? No , the world is right ; the impulses of nature are more trust- worthy than the refinements of speculation . Though time be our greatest treasure , yet the ...
... ment , in sad accents , or in sober silence , the irreparable flight of Time ? No , the world is right ; the impulses of nature are more trust- worthy than the refinements of speculation . Though time be our greatest treasure , yet the ...
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... ment has been augmented , not to speak of the missionaries and agents whose bones rest in the soil of Liberia . In fact the progress of the colony has been backward , as far as it respects numbers . The original settlement of New ...
... ment has been augmented , not to speak of the missionaries and agents whose bones rest in the soil of Liberia . In fact the progress of the colony has been backward , as far as it respects numbers . The original settlement of New ...
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... ment . Why , if they qualify themselves for this situation , should it not be so ? We believe no reason can be alleged why it should not , apart from their color . If an amalgamation of the two colors is dread- ed , is it not in rapid ...
... ment . Why , if they qualify themselves for this situation , should it not be so ? We believe no reason can be alleged why it should not , apart from their color . If an amalgamation of the two colors is dread- ed , is it not in rapid ...
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... ment may have his sensibilities called forth by a tale of distress , which the sober man of feeling listens to with cold indifference , because he knows it to be the result of indolence or vice ; while , if it be unde- served , and the ...
... ment may have his sensibilities called forth by a tale of distress , which the sober man of feeling listens to with cold indifference , because he knows it to be the result of indolence or vice ; while , if it be unde- served , and the ...
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... ment is the admiration of his acquaintances ; Feeling , the delight of his friends . No better illustration can be given of the difference be- tween them , than was shown in their conduct on one particular occa- sion . A mutual friend ...
... ment is the admiration of his acquaintances ; Feeling , the delight of his friends . No better illustration can be given of the difference be- tween them , than was shown in their conduct on one particular occa- sion . A mutual friend ...
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American American Colonization Society amount animal appears Bank beautiful better Boston called Candu cent character Colonization Society colony Columbia river committee common Congress Connecticut constitution Court death dollars duties eloquent eral favor feel friends Fustian gentlemen Georgia give Great-Britain hand heart heaven honor House hundred Indians John Kentucky labor lady land Legislature Liberia live look Massachusetts matter means ment miles mind moral native nature never New-England New-York object Ohio passed Pennsylvania persons Philadelphia Pocahontas poem poetry present Rail-roads reader resolution respect Richard Savage river Samuel Houston seems seen sentiment slaves speak spirit Stanberry Stephen Girard supposed Tariff of 1828 taste thee thing thou thought thousand tion town truth United Virginia whole words writer young