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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Seite 15
... speak from personal knowledge . ) They deny that they have any connection with Africa . They are almost to a man opposed to the project of emigration , and resolved to await the changes time may bring forth , here . They con- sider this ...
... speak from personal knowledge . ) They deny that they have any connection with Africa . They are almost to a man opposed to the project of emigration , and resolved to await the changes time may bring forth , here . They con- sider this ...
Seite 18
... 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 - England was considered a desperate ...
... 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 - England was considered a desperate ...
Seite 25
... speaking tremulously , and lachrymal glands which are easily excited . But words are as cheap as air , and tears cost but little to him who has the knack ( as many have ) of making them come when he will . The very man that you have ...
... speaking tremulously , and lachrymal glands which are easily excited . But words are as cheap as air , and tears cost but little to him who has the knack ( as many have ) of making them come when he will . The very man that you have ...
Seite 26
... speak so often and so well , as on the duty of doing good to each other . Feeling never wrote a paragraph in the newspapers , nor spoke where ten people could hear him ; but there is not a cellar or a garret in Broad - street , that he ...
... speak so often and so well , as on the duty of doing good to each other . Feeling never wrote a paragraph in the newspapers , nor spoke where ten people could hear him ; but there is not a cellar or a garret in Broad - street , that he ...
Seite 31
... speak now of the dwelling houses of our citizens , the homes of our men of business , as well as of the few men of fortune , who are scattered through the country , and in these we include all who are able to own the estates which they ...
... speak now of the dwelling houses of our citizens , the homes of our men of business , as well as of the few men of fortune , who are scattered through the country , and in these we include all who are able to own the estates which they ...
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