Leisure Labors: Or, Miscellanies Historical, Literary, and PoliticalD. Appleton, 1858 - 408 pages |
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Page 35
... Madison , and the last by Thomas Jefferson . It is foreign to the purposes we have in view to discuss elaborately the merits of these well - known documents . We shall content ourselves with a single remark . They contain , in our ...
... Madison , and the last by Thomas Jefferson . It is foreign to the purposes we have in view to discuss elaborately the merits of these well - known documents . We shall content ourselves with a single remark . They contain , in our ...
Page 37
... Madison , who , however , had favored it from the first . We must here pause for the present . In some fu- ture number , the grounds here assumed will be further elucidated . We have now brought Jefferson to the end of the third era of ...
... Madison , who , however , had favored it from the first . We must here pause for the present . In some fu- ture number , the grounds here assumed will be further elucidated . We have now brought Jefferson to the end of the third era of ...
Page 57
... Madison and John Quincy Adams , or the no - party administrations of Monroe and Tyler , if we except the Alien and Sedition Laws of 1798. It may be remarked , however , that these laws , if uncon- stitutional and odious , must be laid ...
... Madison and John Quincy Adams , or the no - party administrations of Monroe and Tyler , if we except the Alien and Sedition Laws of 1798. It may be remarked , however , that these laws , if uncon- stitutional and odious , must be laid ...
Page 76
... Madison , Monroe , and John Quincy Adams , was rich in minds formed in the generation of Washington . The fruits of this reign of liberty were fully reaped during the dictatorship of Andrew Jack- son . In the time of Jefferson , such ...
... Madison , Monroe , and John Quincy Adams , was rich in minds formed in the generation of Washington . The fruits of this reign of liberty were fully reaped during the dictatorship of Andrew Jack- son . In the time of Jefferson , such ...
Page 115
... Madison . It is not , therefore , legitimately within the objects of this review to pursue further a history of governmental affairs . We pause on the verge of the war , and must leave the interested reader to search the pages of his ...
... Madison . It is not , therefore , legitimately within the objects of this review to pursue further a history of governmental affairs . We pause on the verge of the war , and must leave the interested reader to search the pages of his ...
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Aaron Burr Adams administration admiration afterwards American Andrew Jackson Bank Berlin decree bill British Burr Calhoun cause cession character charter claim clause Clay Congress connection consequence Constitution contest Convention course Crawford declaration decrees deed deed of cession Democratic District doctrine election embargo eminently England ernment event evidence excitement Executive fact fame favor Federal Federalists France friends Government Hamilton hands Henry Clay hostile influence interest Jackson Jacobin clubs John Adams John Quincy Adams Legislature less letter Louisiana Macaulay Madison ment Milan decrees mind Minister Monroe Napoleon nation never object opinion opposition orders in Council party passed poem political popular President question reader regarded republican resolution scarcely scenes Senate sentiment slave slavery soon Spain spirit taste territory Thomas Jefferson tion treaty Union United Virginia vote Washington Whig whole Willis writers