I feel assured that slavery must give way, and will give way, to the salutary instructions of economy, and to the ripening influences of humanity... Our Living Representative Men - Stran 413avtor: John Savage - 1860 - 503 straniCelotni ogled - O knjigi
| 1898
...Constitution, which regulates our authority over the domain and devotes it to the same noble purposes. ... I feel assured that slavery must give way, 'and will...inevitable and is near; that it may be hastened or hindered ; and that whether it shall be peaceful or violent, depends upon the question whether it be hastened... | |
| Howard Walter Caldwell - 1900 - 282 strani
...Constitution, which regulates our authority over the domain and devotes it to the same noble purposes. ... 1 feel assured that slavery must give way, and will...and is near; that it may be hastened or hindered; and that whether it shall be peaceful or violent, depends upon the question whether it be hastened... | |
| Frederic Bancroft - 1900 - 576 strani
...point of my separation from both of these parties. I feel assured that slavery must give way, and 249 will give way, to the salutary instructions of economy,...and is near ; that it may be hastened or hindered ; and that whether it shall be peaceful or violent depends upon the question whether it be hastened... | |
| Francis Newton Thorpe - 1901 - 724 strani
...existed,—and here Seward parted company with both the old parties,—he was convinced that slavery must give way "to the salutary instructions of economy and to the ripening influences of humanity." He considered emancipation inevitable and near. It might be hastened or hindered. All measures which... | |
| FRANCIS NEWTON THORPE - 1901 - 862 strani
...existed,—and here Seward parted company with both the old parties,—he was convinced that slavery must give way "to the salutary instructions of economy and to the ripening influences of humanity." He considered emancipation inevitable and near. It might be hastened or hindered. All measures which... | |
| Sir Adolphus William Ward, George Walter Prothero, Sir Stanley Mordaunt Leathes - 1903 - 796 strani
...; and had earnestly avowed the conviction that slavery even within the Slave States must eventually give way " to the salutary instructions of economy and to the ripening influences of humanity." " All measures which fortify slavery or extend it," he declared, " tend to the consummation of violence... | |
| Henry Smith Williams - 1904 - 768 strani
...constitution." While deprecating violence or any illegal action, he avowed his conviction that slavery must give way " to the salutary instructions of economy and to the ripening influences of humanity"; that " all measures which fortify slavery or extend it tend to the consummation of violence — all that... | |
| Woodrow Wilson - 1905 - 378 strani
...Constitution." While deprecating violence or any illegal action, he avowed his conviction that slavery must give way "to the salutary instructions of economy and to the ripening influences of humanity ;" that " all measures which fortify slavery or extend it, tend to the consummation of violence, — all that... | |
| Andrew Van Vranken Raymond - 1907 - 564 strani
...on Mount Sinai, or by His Son on the Mount of Olives." In his "higher law" speech he remarked that: "I feel assured that slavery must give way and will give way to the salutary instruction of economy and to the rightful influence of humanity. That emancipation is inevitable and... | |
| Andrew Van Vranken Raymond - 1907 - 560 strani
...on Mount Sinai, or by His Son on the Mount of Olives." In his "higher law" speech he remarked that: "I feel assured that slavery must give way and will give way to the salutary instruction of economy and to the rightful influence of humanity. That emancipation is inevitable and... | |
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