George Washington, Band 2Houghton Mifflin, 1924 |
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Seite 21
... He might five years later have repeated this sentence , word for word , only alter- ing the tenses , and he would have rehearsed ex- actly the course of events . While he wrote thus he keenly watched Con . gress WORKING FOR UNION 21 .
... He might five years later have repeated this sentence , word for word , only alter- ing the tenses , and he would have rehearsed ex- actly the course of events . While he wrote thus he keenly watched Con . gress WORKING FOR UNION 21 .
Seite 23
... course , received Washington's hearty approval and encouragement , but he evidently regarded it , although important , as merely a preliminary step to something wider and better . He wrote to Lafayette describing the proposed gathering ...
... course , received Washington's hearty approval and encouragement , but he evidently regarded it , although important , as merely a preliminary step to something wider and better . He wrote to Lafayette describing the proposed gathering ...
Seite 26
... course of events in the several States . In them all he re- sisted the craze for issuing irredeemable paper money , writing to his various correspondents , and urging energetic opposition to this specious and pernicious form of public ...
... course of events in the several States . In them all he re- sisted the craze for issuing irredeemable paper money , writing to his various correspondents , and urging energetic opposition to this specious and pernicious form of public ...
Seite 29
... course worked with them , but they used events , and did not suffer the golden opportunities , which without them would have been lost , to slip by . When Washington wrote of the Shays rebellion to Lee , the movement toward a better ...
... course worked with them , but they used events , and did not suffer the golden opportunities , which without them would have been lost , to slip by . When Washington wrote of the Shays rebellion to Lee , the movement toward a better ...
Seite 33
... course before Washington was chosen president . Mr. Fiske , who devotes a page to these sentences from the eulogy , describes Washington as rising from his president's chair and addressing the convention with great solemnity . There is ...
... course before Washington was chosen president . Mr. Fiske , who devotes a page to these sentences from the eulogy , describes Washington as rising from his president's chair and addressing the convention with great solemnity . There is ...
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