The War, Its Causes and ConsequencesBlelock & Company, 1864 - 260 Seiten |
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Seite 10
... progress only under the ægis of its political principles . It was deemed to have been organized with a special view to internal peace and domestic tranquil- lity ; while it was not defective in capacity for success- ful resistance to ...
... progress only under the ægis of its political principles . It was deemed to have been organized with a special view to internal peace and domestic tranquil- lity ; while it was not defective in capacity for success- ful resistance to ...
Seite 16
... progress of intelli- gence , it will never again serve as a basis of govern- ment . We may as soon expect paganism to reassert successfully its claims to social dominion , as that Cathol- icism shall once more take possession of society ...
... progress of intelli- gence , it will never again serve as a basis of govern- ment . We may as soon expect paganism to reassert successfully its claims to social dominion , as that Cathol- icism shall once more take possession of society ...
Seite 17
... progress ; and as men are inclined for conservatism or amelioration , they arrange themselves under one or the other of the two banners . It is not my purpose to fol- low in detail the conflicts of these two forces , or to notice the ...
... progress ; and as men are inclined for conservatism or amelioration , they arrange themselves under one or the other of the two banners . It is not my purpose to fol- low in detail the conflicts of these two forces , or to notice the ...
Seite 19
... progress and security with advancement . By giving the widest latitude to human liberty - restricting no principle , limiting no idea ― asserting all their dogmas to be abso- lute and universal - they hope , by means of such a for- mula ...
... progress and security with advancement . By giving the widest latitude to human liberty - restricting no principle , limiting no idea ― asserting all their dogmas to be abso- lute and universal - they hope , by means of such a for- mula ...
Seite 21
... progress of this work . Though the French Revolution may be said to have been the period of their highest intensification in Europe , the democratic dogmas have allowed few Euro- pean societies to escape unharmed ; all have shared a ...
... progress of this work . Though the French Revolution may be said to have been the period of their highest intensification in Europe , the democratic dogmas have allowed few Euro- pean societies to escape unharmed ; all have shared a ...
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
36th Congress abolition abolitionism Abolitionists absolute administration adopted already authority become cause ciples compromise conduct Confederacy Congress consequences constitution danger demagogues democracy democratic polity democratic principles derived despotism disorganizing dissolution disturbance doctrine dogma of equality elections element epoch ernment Europe evil existence fanaticism favor federacy Federal government force free inquiry French Revolution Greece Guizot higher law hostile human nature ical ideas individual influence institutions interests labor latter less liberty of conscience majority ment mind moral nation never North Northern nullification occasion opinion organization party passed passions peace peculiar persons political popular sovereignty population possessed practice present progress Protestantism purpose questions reason render Republicans resistance revolution ruin Sans-Culottes secession sectional sentiment sion slavery social system society South South Carolina sovereign sovereign communities spirit tendency things tion true Union United unity universal suffrage vidual vote
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 39 - The Congress, the Executive and the Court must each for itself be guided by its own opinion of the Constitution. Each public officer who takes an oath to support the Constitution swears that he will support it as he understands it, and not as it is understood by others.
Seite 193 - That the government created by this compact was not made the exclusive or final judge of the extent of the powers delegated to itself; since that would have made its discretion, and not the Constitution, the measure of its powers; but that, as in all other cases of compact among parties having no common judge, each party has an equal right to judge for itself, as well of infractions, as of the mode and measure of redress.
Seite 162 - But that the Union was designed to be perpetual appears conclusively from the nature and extent of the powers conferred by the Constitution on the federal government. These powers embrace the very highest attributes of national sovereignty. They place both the sword and the purse under its control. Congress has power to...
Seite 197 - If a league between sovereign powers have no limitation as to the time of its duration, and contain nothing making it perpetual, it subsists only during the good pleasure of the parties, although no violation be complained of.
Seite 193 - Government, for that purpose, certain definite powers, to be exercised jointly, reserving, at the same time, each State to itself, the residuary mass of powers, to be exercised by its own separate Government ; and that whenever the General Government assumes the exercise of powers not delegated by the compact, its acts are unauthorized...
Seite 99 - The ludicrous absurdity of their contemplated reform seems never to have disturbed the complacency of their thoughts, or to have raised a doubt of the practicability of their plans. They do not appear to have asked themselves the questions: What was to be done with a Speaker of the House, or a Presidentess of the Senate, in the seventh month of her pregnancy? or a General-in-Chief, who, at the opening of a campaign, was " doing as well as could be expected...
Seite 197 - ... complained of. If, in the opinion of either party, it be violated, such party may say that he will no longer fulfil its obligations on his part, but will consider the whole league or compact at an end, although it might be one of its stipulations that it should be perpetual. Upon this principle, the Congress of the United States, in 1798, declared null and void the treaty of alliance between the United States and France, though it professed to be a perpetual alliance.
Seite 11 - We perceive no exertion of power in the motion of the planetary system, but a very strong one in the movement of a whirlwind; it is because we see obstructions to the latter, but none to the former. Where the government is not in the hands of the people, there you find opposition, you perceive two contending interests, and get an idea of the exercise of power; and whether this power be in the hands of the government or of the people, or whether it change from side to side, it is always to be dreaded....
Seite 11 - ... in America, has a different meaning from what it has in Europe. It there means the whole community, and comprehends every human creature; here it means something else, more difficult to define. Another consequence of the habitual idea of equality, is the facility of changing the structure of their government, whenever, and as often as the society shall think there is anything in it to amend. As Mr. Burke has written no "reflections on the revolution...
Seite 25 - In one nation, as in Greece, the unity of the social principle led to a development of wonderful rapidity; no other people ever ran so brilliant a career in so short a time. But Greece had hardly become glorious, before she appeared worn out: her decline, if not quite so rapid as her rise, was strangely sudden. It seems as if the principle which called Greek civilization into life was exhausted. No other came to invigorate it, or supply its place.