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 48
The colour of the prisoner's skin , and the form of his features , are not impressed
upon the spiritual , immortal mind which works beneath . In spite of human pride ,
he is still your brother , and mine , in form and color accepted and approved by ...
The colour of the prisoner's skin , and the form of his features , are not impressed
upon the spiritual , immortal mind which works beneath . In spite of human pride ,
he is still your brother , and mine , in form and color accepted and approved by ...
Seite 190
Never , certainly , had I been before in so high a presence ; and never shall I
forget the impressions left upon my mind by these three wondrous men . Mr.
Webster , unless when greatly occupied by business , always acknowledged me
in Court ...
Never , certainly , had I been before in so high a presence ; and never shall I
forget the impressions left upon my mind by these three wondrous men . Mr.
Webster , unless when greatly occupied by business , always acknowledged me
in Court ...
Seite 387
This is an unhappy state of the public mind ; and even , I might say , in a
Government resting essentially on public opinion , a dangerous one . In war it is
different . Its privation , it is true , may be equal or greater ; but the public mind ,
under the ...
This is an unhappy state of the public mind ; and even , I might say , in a
Government resting essentially on public opinion , a dangerous one . In war it is
different . Its privation , it is true , may be equal or greater ; but the public mind ,
under the ...
Seite 451
that our recollections shall dwell in future only on those conflicts of mind with
mind , those intellectual struggles , those noble exhibitions of the powers of logic ,
argument , and eloquence , honourable to the Senate and to the Nation , in which
...
that our recollections shall dwell in future only on those conflicts of mind with
mind , those intellectual struggles , those noble exhibitions of the powers of logic ,
argument , and eloquence , honourable to the Senate and to the Nation , in which
...
Seite 489
... not in the mechanical instruction of the schools , —they o'er inform the mind ,
and leave the spirit in its ignorance ; not in the abridgment of Liberty , either
public or private , —God forbid ! And looking round in anxious and enquiring
solicitude ...
... not in the mechanical instruction of the schools , —they o'er inform the mind ,
and leave the spirit in its ignorance ; not in the abridgment of Liberty , either
public or private , —God forbid ! And looking round in anxious and enquiring
solicitude ...
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