The Statesmen of America in 1846In this book, first published in 1847, the English author Sarah Mytton Maury gives a personal and very positive account of her impressions of the United States upon arriving there in late 1845. Through marriage she gains access to many American statesmen of her day, and the book is dedicated to James Buchanan, later President of the United States. Maury portrays prominent senators, judges, officers, members of the clergy and Presidents John Adams and James K. Polk. Many of the descriptions are interspersed with extracts from speeches and letters by those portrayed. The book gives a great deal of attention to the early nineteenth-century dispute between Britain and the United States about territorial claims in the north-west, the so-called 'Oregon Question'. On this question as in other matters of contention or cultural differences between the two countries, Maury maintains a position of neutrality. |
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Seite 81
I set off one summer morning in my best attire , and with a small knapsack on my
back , to visit the Falls of Niagara . As a matter of course I took up my abode at the
Hotel , and at dinner , as a matter of course also , I seated myself at the table ...
I set off one summer morning in my best attire , and with a small knapsack on my
back , to visit the Falls of Niagara . As a matter of course I took up my abode at the
Hotel , and at dinner , as a matter of course also , I seated myself at the table ...
Seite 115
... laughed heartily at my mode of self - introduction , himself lifted from the
carriage my travelling bandbox , first ordered the driver home , and then said , “
The name you bear , Madam , is of itself a sufficient introduction ; of course you
will stay ...
... laughed heartily at my mode of self - introduction , himself lifted from the
carriage my travelling bandbox , first ordered the driver home , and then said , “
The name you bear , Madam , is of itself a sufficient introduction ; of course you
will stay ...
Seite 384
Nothing was wanting on his part but to accommodate himself to the course of
events , without regard to their effects on the country , to have attained the highest
office , which lay within a single step from the place where he then stood . This he
...
Nothing was wanting on his part but to accommodate himself to the course of
events , without regard to their effects on the country , to have attained the highest
office , which lay within a single step from the place where he then stood . This he
...
Seite 391
advert to my own course but the conviction that it is due to the cause at which a
blow is aimed through me . It is only in this view that I notice it . It ill became the
Chief Magistrate to make this charge . The course which the State took , and
which ...
advert to my own course but the conviction that it is due to the cause at which a
blow is aimed through me . It is only in this view that I notice it . It ill became the
Chief Magistrate to make this charge . The course which the State took , and
which ...
Seite 455
The first circumstance which , in the course of his performing that duty , fixed our
attention , has filled me with regret . It was the execution of the Indian chiefs . How
, I ask , did they come into our possession ? Was it in the course of fair , and ...
The first circumstance which , in the course of his performing that duty , fixed our
attention , has filled me with regret . It was the execution of the Indian chiefs . How
, I ask , did they come into our possession ? Was it in the course of fair , and ...
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