| Daniel Webster - 1850 - 64 pagine
...South. The North was not so much excited against it as the South ; and the reason is, I suppose, because there was much less of it at the North, and the people did not see, or think they saw, the evils so prominently as they were seen, or thought tolbe seen, at the South.... | |
| Daniel Webster - 1851 - 568 pagine
...the South. The North was not so much excited against it as the South; arid the reason is, I suppose, that there was much less of it at the North, and the people did not see, or think they saw, the evils so prominently as they were seen, or thought to be seen, at the South.... | |
| Daniel Webster - 1853 - 566 pagine
...the South. The North was not so much excited against it as the South; and the reason is, I suppose, that there was much less of it at the North, and the people did not see, or think they saw, the evils so prominently as they were seen, or thought to be seen, at the South.... | |
| 1857 - 700 pagine
...then no diversity of opinion between the north and the south on the subject of slavery. It will be found that both parts of the country held it equally...speaking through their most influential organs and teachers — were far more urgent in their denunciations than the politicians ; while the general literature... | |
| 1857 - 692 pagine
...terms of reprobation of slavery so vehement at the north at that day as in the south. The north waa not so much excited against it as the south, and the...general literature of the country — the first American novel that was ever printed, one of the earliest of American poems, the newspapers and the colleges... | |
| Henry Stuart Foote - 1866 - 452 pagine
...the South. The North was not so much excited against it as the South ; and the reason is, I suppose, that there was much less of it at the North, and the people did not see, or think they saw, the evils so prominently as they were seen, or thought to be seen, at the South."... | |
| Daniel Webster, Edwin Percy Whipple - 1879 - 780 pagine
...the South. The North was not so much excited against it as the South ; and the reason is, I suppose, 4 or think they saw, the evils so prominently as they were seen, or thought to be seen, at the South.... | |
| Boston (Mass.) - 1879 - 92 pagine
...as in the South. The North was not so excited against it as the South; and the reason is, I suppose, that there was much less of it at the North, and the people did not see, or think they saw, the evils so prominently as they were seen, or thought to be seen, at the South."... | |
| 1900 - 448 pagine
...the South. The North was not so much excited against it as the South; and the reason is, I suppose, that there was much less of it at the North, and the people did not see, or think they saw, the evils so prominently as they were seen, or thought to be seen, at the South.... | |
| 1900 - 448 pagine
...the South. The North was not so much excited against it as the South; and the reason is, I suppose, that there was much less of it at the North, and the people did not see, or think they saw, the evils so prominently as they were seen, or thought to be seen, at the South.... | |
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