Southern Quarterly Review, Volume 2Daniel Kimball Whitaker, Milton Clapp, William Gilmore Simms, James Henley Thornwell Wiley & Putnam, 1967 |
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Page 71
... influence can be exerted sufficiently powerful to induce the slave voluntarily to part with his master , -even with the prospect of being free . The bitter tears and sincere lementations following every separation attest this truth ...
... influence can be exerted sufficiently powerful to induce the slave voluntarily to part with his master , -even with the prospect of being free . The bitter tears and sincere lementations following every separation attest this truth ...
Page 88
... influence of sanguine youth and great expectations . He was fitted to suc- ceed in public life , by capacity for business , skill in di- plomacy , and dexterity in debate ; by industry , tact , and cloquence . To all these ...
... influence of sanguine youth and great expectations . He was fitted to suc- ceed in public life , by capacity for business , skill in di- plomacy , and dexterity in debate ; by industry , tact , and cloquence . To all these ...
Page 97
... influence of Queen Caroline , against all the intrigues of his enemies , and the efforts of the good Suffolk , in Bolingbroke's favor , were always ineffectual . Despairing of favor with the court , and of restoration to political influence ...
... influence of Queen Caroline , against all the intrigues of his enemies , and the efforts of the good Suffolk , in Bolingbroke's favor , were always ineffectual . Despairing of favor with the court , and of restoration to political influence ...
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