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 77
God grant he may stand firm to his position ! I honour that Statesman who can go
whither the honour of his country carries him , forgetful of himself and his
personal convenience , or the consistency of his mere opinion . Had Mr. Polk
repeated ...
God grant he may stand firm to his position ! I honour that Statesman who can go
whither the honour of his country carries him , forgetful of himself and his
personal convenience , or the consistency of his mere opinion . Had Mr. Polk
repeated ...
Seite 93
Now , I ask , how we shall stand , compared with Pennsylvania , Ohio , Alabama ,
Georgia or Louisiana when the day of financial trial shall come ? I do not deny
that we shall suffer ; but , as it has been in times past , we shall go into and come
...
Now , I ask , how we shall stand , compared with Pennsylvania , Ohio , Alabama ,
Georgia or Louisiana when the day of financial trial shall come ? I do not deny
that we shall suffer ; but , as it has been in times past , we shall go into and come
...
Seite 215
To their own masters they stand or fall . ” Sir , I deny this power of state
legislatures altogether . It cannot stand the test of examination . Gentlemen may
say that , in an extreme case , a state government might protect the people from
intolerable ...
To their own masters they stand or fall . ” Sir , I deny this power of state
legislatures altogether . It cannot stand the test of examination . Gentlemen may
say that , in an extreme case , a state government might protect the people from
intolerable ...
Seite 408
The State stands pledged to resist no process of the court . ... standing upon its
reserved powers , will prove too powerful in such a controversy , and must
triumph over the Federal Government , sustained by its delegated and limited
authority ...
The State stands pledged to resist no process of the court . ... standing upon its
reserved powers , will prove too powerful in such a controversy , and must
triumph over the Federal Government , sustained by its delegated and limited
authority ...
Seite 464
I hope gentlemen will deliberately survey the awful isthmus on which we stand .
They may bear down all opposition ; they may even vote the General the public
thanks ; they may carry him triumphantly through this House . But , if they do , in
my ...
I hope gentlemen will deliberately survey the awful isthmus on which we stand .
They may bear down all opposition ; they may even vote the General the public
thanks ; they may carry him triumphantly through this House . But , if they do , in
my ...
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