Gouverneur MorrisHoughton Mifflin, 1888 - 370 Seiten |
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
adopted affairs afterwards allies American appointed aristocratic army Assembly believe Britain British cause citizens COLONIAL NEW YORK committee constitution contest Continental Congress convention court delegates Democrats despotism Diary Duchess Duke of Orleans Dutch England English Episcopalian especially Europe European fact favor fear Federalist party Federalists feeling finally foes folly force foreign France freedom French Revolution Gironde give Gouverneur Morris Hamilton HENRY CABOT LODGE honor hostile Huguenot independence interest Irish Jacobins Jefferson king Lafayette leaders letters liberty Livingston loyalist Madame Madame de Staël manorial ment militia minister Morris wrote Morris's nation Necker never once opposed OUTBREAK Paris party patriots peace political republican revolutionary revolutionists Samuel Adams Schuyler sentiment showed side slavery slaves soon South spirit statesmen stood things tion took Tories treaty troops Union United Virginia Washington whole wished writing
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 352 - The Union : next to our Liberty the most dear: may we all remember that it can only be preserved by respecting the rights of the States, and distributing equally the benefit and burden of the Union...
Seite 328 - I have, more at the request of others than from my own mere motion, suggested certain considerations not quite unworthy of attention ; but it is dangerous to be impartial in politics. You, who are temperate in drinking, have never, perhaps, noticed the awkward situation of a man who continues sober after the company are drunk.
Seite 341 - Know then, that one tenth of the expense borne by Britain in the last campaign would enable ships to sail from London through Hudson's river into lake Erie. As yet, my friend, we only crawl along the outer shell of our country. The interior excels the part we inhabit in soil, in climate, in everything. The proudest empire in Europe is but a bauble, compared to what America will be, must be, in the course of two centuries; perhaps of one...
Seite 29 - The mob begin to think and to reason. Poor reptiles! It is with them a vernal morning; they are struggling to cast off their winter's slough, they bask in the sunshine, and ere noon they will bite, depend upon it. The gentry begin to fear this. Their Committee will be appointed, they will deceive the people, and again forfeit a share of their confidence.
Seite 149 - As to the alarm sounded, of an aristocracy, his creed was, that there never was, nor ever will be, a civilized society without an aristocracy. His endeavor was, to keep it as much as possible from doing mischief.
Seite 242 - Like the remnants of ancient magnificence, we admire the architecture of the temple, while we detest the false god to whom it was dedicated. Daws and ravens, and the birds of night, now build their nests in its niches. The sovereign, humbled to the level of a beggar's pity, without resources, without authority, without a friend. The Assembly, at once a master and a slave, new in power, wild in theory, raw in practice. It engrosses all functions, though incapable of exercising any, and has taken from...
Seite 264 - I have seen the late constitution, in one abort year, admired as a stupendous monument of human wisdom, and ridiculed as an egregious production of folly and vice. I wish much, very much, the happiness of this inconstant people. I love them.
Seite 215 - If the reigning prince were not the small beer character that he is, there can be but little doubt, that watching events, and making a tolerable use of them, he would regain his authority; but what will you have from a creature who, situated as he is, eats, and drinks, and sleeps well, and laughs, and is as merry a grig as lives...