George Washington, Band 2Houghton Mifflin, 1924 |
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... strong and simple natures , he loved above all an open - air existence . He felt that he had earned his rest , with all the temperate pleasures and em- ployments which came with it , and he fondly be- lieved that he was about to renew ...
... strong and simple natures , he loved above all an open - air existence . He felt that he had earned his rest , with all the temperate pleasures and em- ployments which came with it , and he fondly be- lieved that he was about to renew ...
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... which were purely national in their scope . He insisted on the necessity of binding to the old colonies by strong ties the West- ern States , which might easily be decoyed away if Spain or England had the sense to do it 10 GEORGE ...
... which were purely national in their scope . He insisted on the necessity of binding to the old colonies by strong ties the West- ern States , which might easily be decoyed away if Spain or England had the sense to do it 10 GEORGE ...
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... strong man ever dealing with facts as they actually were on this confused earth , and not turning aside be- cause things were not as they ought to be . Thus many a battle and campaign had been saved , and so inland navigation played its ...
... strong man ever dealing with facts as they actually were on this confused earth , and not turning aside be- cause things were not as they ought to be . Thus many a battle and campaign had been saved , and so inland navigation played its ...
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... strong to be broken . The fear that the river would be lost by waiting did not disturb him in the least , provided our claims were kept alive . He wrote to Lee in June , 1786 : " When- ever the new States ' become so populous , and so ...
... strong to be broken . The fear that the river would be lost by waiting did not disturb him in the least , provided our claims were kept alive . He wrote to Lee in June , 1786 : " When- ever the new States ' become so populous , and so ...
Seite 19
... strong public appeals for union . The letter to the governors argued the question elaborately , and was intended for the general public . The address to the army was simply a watchword and last general order ; for the army needed no ...
... strong public appeals for union . The letter to the governors argued the question elaborately , and was intended for the general public . The address to the army was simply a watchword and last general order ; for the army needed no ...
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