Works, Volumen16,Tema 8G.P. Putnam's Sons, 1857 |
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... mind to ratify it , should it be approved by the Senate . As a system of predetermined hostility to the treaty , however , was already manifested , and efforts were made to awaken popular jeal- ousy concerning it , Washington kept its ...
... mind to ratify it , should it be approved by the Senate . As a system of predetermined hostility to the treaty , however , was already manifested , and efforts were made to awaken popular jeal- ousy concerning it , Washington kept its ...
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... wrested into a cause of offense . Republics should have no secrets . The Senate should not have deliberated on the treaty with closed doors . Such was the irritable condition of the public mind , 6 Life of Washington.
... wrested into a cause of offense . Republics should have no secrets . The Senate should not have deliberated on the treaty with closed doors . Such was the irritable condition of the public mind , 6 Life of Washington.
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Washington Irving. Such was the irritable condition of the public mind , when on the 29th of June , a Senator of the United States ( Mr. Mason of Virginia ) , sent an abstract of the treaty to be published in a leading opposition paper ...
Washington Irving. Such was the irritable condition of the public mind , when on the 29th of June , a Senator of the United States ( Mr. Mason of Virginia ) , sent an abstract of the treaty to be published in a leading opposition paper ...
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... minds of the people the most arrant misrepresentation of facts ; that their rights have not only been neglected , but absolutely sold ; that there are no reciprocal advantages in the treaty ; that the benefits are all on the side of ...
... minds of the people the most arrant misrepresentation of facts ; that their rights have not only been neglected , but absolutely sold ; that there are no reciprocal advantages in the treaty ; that the benefits are all on the side of ...
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... mind in silence . The pre- dominant object of his thoughts recently had been to put a stop to the public agitation on the subject of the treaty ; and he postponed any new question of difficulty until decided measures had laid the other ...
... mind in silence . The pre- dominant object of his thoughts recently had been to put a stop to the public agitation on the subject of the treaty ; and he postponed any new question of difficulty until decided measures had laid the other ...
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