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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unity of religious and political sympathy . Instinct with devotional and polemical
fervour , American religion passed through the successive stages from
ecclesiastical domination to toleration , and from that to divorce of Church and
State , till the ...
unity of religious and political sympathy . Instinct with devotional and polemical
fervour , American religion passed through the successive stages from
ecclesiastical domination to toleration , and from that to divorce of Church and
State , till the ...
Seite 330
The Articles of Confederation bound the states to assist each other against all
attacks upon any of them on account of religion . But the last line of the federal
constitution merely declares that no religious test shall ever be required as a ...
The Articles of Confederation bound the states to assist each other against all
attacks upon any of them on account of religion . But the last line of the federal
constitution merely declares that no religious test shall ever be required as a ...
Seite 331
Religious principle thus strengthened by toleration , political separation of
Church from State has had the further unlooked for result of aggrandizing the ...
Religion is the essence of governing , though government be dissevered from it .
Religious principle thus strengthened by toleration , political separation of
Church from State has had the further unlooked for result of aggrandizing the ...
Religion is the essence of governing , though government be dissevered from it .
Seite 332
As government forbears , religion interposes and becomes the cement of the
community . The divorce of Church from State , while it annuls compulsive
obedience and support , substitutes the stronger tie of voluntary attachment ,
which is often ...
As government forbears , religion interposes and becomes the cement of the
community . The divorce of Church from State , while it annuls compulsive
obedience and support , substitutes the stronger tie of voluntary attachment ,
which is often ...
Seite 454
religious belief to them . It does not belong to the holy character of the religion
which we profess , to carry its precepts , by the force of the bayonet , into the
bosoms of other people . Mild and gentle persuasion was the great instrument ...
religious belief to them . It does not belong to the holy character of the religion
which we profess , to carry its precepts , by the force of the bayonet , into the
bosoms of other people . Mild and gentle persuasion was the great instrument ...
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