| Rushmore G. Horton - 1856 - 454 Seiten
...Proviso was interposed, to add fuel to the flame, and to excite the southern people to madness. ******* " It would be the extreme of dangerous infatuation to...could have prevented the secession of most, if not all the slaveholding States. " It was from this great and glorious old Commonwealth, rightly demonstrated... | |
| Rushmore G. Horton - 1856 - 448 Seiten
...Proviso was interposed, to add fuel to the flame, and to excite the southern people to madness. ******* " It would be the extreme of dangerous infatuation to...slavery been abolished in the District of Columbia, n«thing short of a special interposition of Divine Providence could have prevented the secession of... | |
| Rushmore G. Horton - 1856 - 446 Seiten
...was 'interposed, to add fuel to the flame, -and to excite the southern people to madness. ******* " It would be the extreme of dangerous infatuation to...Proviso become a law, or had slavery been abolished in the'District of Columbia, nothing short of a special interposition of Divine Providence could have... | |
| George Ticknor Curtis - 1883 - 734 Seiten
...Wilmot proviso was interposed, to add fuel to the flame, and to excite the Southern people to madness. It would be the extreme of dangerous infatuation to...could have prevented the secession of most, if not nil, the slaveholding States. It was from this great and glorious old Commonweallh, rightly denominated... | |
| George Ticknor Curtis - 1883 - 726 Seiten
...ceded to the Union, under the Constitution, for the protection and defence of the country. It would bo the extreme of dangerous infatuation to suppose that...have prevented the secession of most, if not all, the slaveholding States. It was from this great and glorious old Commonwealth, rightly denominated... | |
| George Ticknor Curtis - 1883 - 736 Seiten
...Wilmot proviso was interposed, to •dd fuel to the flame, and to excite the Southern people to madness. It would be the extreme of dangerous infatuation to...the Union was not then in serious danger. Had the Wiltnot proviso become a law, or had slavery been abolished in the District of Columbia, nothing short... | |
| James Anderson Barnes - 1925 - 356 Seiten
...problems that faced 4. Buchanan, in a. letter dated Ho v . 19, I860, said of slavery: "Had the TTilmot proviso become a law, or had slavery been abolished...of most, if not all, of the slaveholding states." (Works . Ed. by Moore, Till, pp. 396-396). "The impression is now very general, and is on the increase,... | |
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