Benjamin Franklin: His Contribution to the American TraditionBobbs-Merrill, 1953 - 320 Seiten |
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Seite 69
... able share of felicity , the conducing means I made use of , which , with the blessing of God , so well succeeded , my posterity may like to know , as they may find some of them suitable to their own situations , and therefore fit to be ...
... able share of felicity , the conducing means I made use of , which , with the blessing of God , so well succeeded , my posterity may like to know , as they may find some of them suitable to their own situations , and therefore fit to be ...
Seite 107
... able to answer it , their op- position slackened , and the point was carried by a ma- jority in the House . My friends there , who conceived I had been of some service , thought fit to reward me , by employing me in printing the money ...
... able to answer it , their op- position slackened , and the point was carried by a ma- jority in the House . My friends there , who conceived I had been of some service , thought fit to reward me , by employing me in printing the money ...
Seite 303
... able to answer the letter immediately , nor attend " to any kind of business . " When at last he found himself able to write to Jefferson , his mind was sharp and his memory precise , and he supplied the needed data to the accompaniment ...
... able to answer the letter immediately , nor attend " to any kind of business . " When at last he found himself able to write to Jefferson , his mind was sharp and his memory precise , and he supplied the needed data to the accompaniment ...
Inhalt
PAGE | 27 |
INVENTIONS AND APPLICATIONS OF SCIENCE | 189 |
THE STYLE OF BEING AMERICAN | 225 |
Urheberrecht | |
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acquaintance advantage American tradition Autobiography Benjamin Franklin Boston called century character chimney colonies common conductors continued Cotton Mather distemper electricity empiricism England equal expence experience father fire fire-places Franklin stove Franklin wrote friends gave Gazette give hand hospital improvement industry inhabitants inoculation inventions Jefferson Keimer laws letters liberty lightning rod living London Mark Twain means ment mind nature never observed occasion opinion paper parliament Pennsylvania Pennsylvania Gazette Pennsylvania Hospital persons Philadelphia philosophy political Poor Richard says pounds sterling practice present principles printer printing house published reason religion Richard Bache Second Continental Congress sect slavery slaves society soon Stamp Act stoves taxes things thought thousand pounds thro tion took town trade VINDEX virtue warm wealth whole William Heberden writing