Memoirs of John Quincy Adams: Comprising Portions of His Diary from 1795 to 1848, Band 4J.B. Lippincott & Company, 1875 |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-5 von 87
Seite 10
... President and Mr. Rush , and because there was no ground for me to remove him . I considered myself under an obligation to appoint another person to the place vacated by Mr. Brent . He asked if it was either of the clerks now in the ...
... President and Mr. Rush , and because there was no ground for me to remove him . I considered myself under an obligation to appoint another person to the place vacated by Mr. Brent . He asked if it was either of the clerks now in the ...
Seite 13
... President had returned last evening to the city . I found him at his house , and had an hour's conversation with him . Mr. Crawford came in while I was there , and I left him with the President . It was past five when I got home to ...
... President had returned last evening to the city . I found him at his house , and had an hour's conversation with him . Mr. Crawford came in while I was there , and I left him with the President . It was past five when I got home to ...
Seite 14
... President the letter for him , together with many other papers . The President had sent me this morning the draft of instructions for Mr. Rush , with a memorandum for alterations on three points . On conversing with him , and recurring ...
... President the letter for him , together with many other papers . The President had sent me this morning the draft of instructions for Mr. Rush , with a memorandum for alterations on three points . On conversing with him , and recurring ...
Seite 15
... President said he had offered the office of Secretary of War to Mr. Cal- houn , of South Carolina , and was daily expecting his answer . Mr. Crowninshield , the Secretary of the Navy , was on his way to the city , and expected here in a ...
... President said he had offered the office of Secretary of War to Mr. Cal- houn , of South Carolina , and was daily expecting his answer . Mr. Crowninshield , the Secretary of the Navy , was on his way to the city , and expected here in a ...
Seite 16
... President of the United States ; I had received his letter asking the question some days since , and by the President's direction had immedi- ately answered that he might take the oath before any magis- trate competent to administer ...
... President of the United States ; I had received his letter asking the question some days since , and by the President's direction had immedi- ately answered that he might take the oath before any magis- trate competent to administer ...
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
Administration affairs agreed Amelia Island answer appointment asked Attorney-General Bagot Baltimore Britain British Government Buenos Ayres Cabinet meeting Calhoun called Captain Chargé d'Affaires claims Clay Committee concerning considered Consul conversation copy Court Court-martial Crawford Crowninshield declaration dispatches draft duties England enquire Erving Executive favor Florida foreign Ministers Forsyth France French Minister Gallatin give Governor grants heads of Departments House of Representatives Hyde de Neuville immediately instructions Jackson King of Spain late letter Lord Castlereagh Louisiana ment Monroe morning nation National Intelligencer negotiation o'clock object Onis Onis's opinion papers Pensacola person Poletica present President President's proposed question ratification received recommend request Rush Russia Secretary Seminole War Senate sent session of Congress South American taken thought tion to-morrow told treaty Treaty of Ghent United vessels Wirt wished yesterday
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 461 - Dans l'adversité de nos meilleurs amis, nous trouvons toujours quelque chose qui ne nous déplaît pas.
Seite 249 - To all claims of citizens of the United States upon the Spanish Government, statements of which, soliciting the interposition of the Government of the United States, have been presented...
Seite 529 - A dissolution, at least temporary, of the Union, as now constituted would be certainly necessary, and the dissolution must be upon a point involving the question of slavery, and no other. The Union might then be reorganized on the fundamental principle of emancipation. This object is vast in its compass, awful in its prospects, sublime and beautiful in its issue. A life devoted to it would be nobly spent or sacrificed.
Seite 523 - Oh, if but one man could arise with a genius capable of comprehending, a heart capable of supporting, and an utterance capable of communicating those eternal truths that belong to this question, to lay bare in all its nakedness that outrage upon the goodness of God, human slavery, now is the time, and this is the occasion, upon which such a man would perform the duties of an angel upon earth ! 1 3th.
Seite 76 - G — d, he would breed you a quarrel before he had been there a month ! " * l 5 Adams, 359, 368 to 380.
Seite 242 - Wirt, were present, but not the Chief Justice. Mr. Crawford had prepared the annual report to both Houses of Congress, which was read and signed. The meeting was over in half an hour. Tompkins told a story of a justice of the peace in the State of New York, who, for ten years together, was in the constant practice of swearing witnesses, and certifying that he had sworn them, that they were neither interested nor disinterested in the event of the suit upon which they testified — meaning that they...
Seite 157 - God! may I die the death of the righteous, and may my last end be like hers ! On receiving this deeply distressing intelligence, I immediately left my office and came home.
Seite 359 - Cicero and Tacitus given me by Wells and Lilly in return for the Ernesti edition of mine, which they had to print their Cicero from. I cannot indulge myself in the luxury of giving two hours a day to these writers ; but to live without having a Cicero and a Tacitus at hand seems to me as if it was a privation of one of my limbs.
Seite 247 - Mr. Onis came at the appointed hour of one, and delivered to me his projet of a treaty . . . nth. . . . The second article of Onis's projet contains the cession of the Floridas by the King of Spain to the United States, but describing the Floridas such as they were ceded by Great Britain in 1783, and with the limits by which they are designated in the treaty of limits and navigation concluded between Spain and the United States on the 27th of October, 1795. I struck out this passage, as being useless...
Seite 386 - I am a man of reserved, cold, austere, and forbidding manners; my political adversaries say, a gloomy misanthropist, and my personal enemies, an unsocial savage. With a knowledge of the actual defect in my character, I have not the pliability to reform it.