The Literary Magazine, and American Register, Volume 6, Issue 38John Conrad & Company, 1806 |
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Page 332
... sion to export to foreign West India islands all articles of its own pro- duce , except cacao , provided the trade be carried on in national bot- toms ; but the returns must be in negroes , or in farming and house- hold utensils , and ...
... sion to export to foreign West India islands all articles of its own pro- duce , except cacao , provided the trade be carried on in national bot- toms ; but the returns must be in negroes , or in farming and house- hold utensils , and ...
Page 345
... sion , or the self - created illusions of a timid or selfish mind . Prudent men will tread the ground of new opinions with cautious steps ; modest men will judge with delibe- ration , and assert with diffidence ; and polite men will not ...
... sion , or the self - created illusions of a timid or selfish mind . Prudent men will tread the ground of new opinions with cautious steps ; modest men will judge with delibe- ration , and assert with diffidence ; and polite men will not ...
Page 350
... sion by inexorable creditors ? Were there among the Greeks and Ro- mans any of those frequent abolition of debts , for the purpose of saving numbers of miserable people , redu- ced to wretchedness , and driven to despair , by the ...
... sion by inexorable creditors ? Were there among the Greeks and Ro- mans any of those frequent abolition of debts , for the purpose of saving numbers of miserable people , redu- ced to wretchedness , and driven to despair , by the ...
Page 357
... sion . If this be a just representation of the conditions upon which the power and security of a representative le- gislature must always depend , it will not be difficult to explain how the experiment miscarried so com- pletely with ...
... sion . If this be a just representation of the conditions upon which the power and security of a representative le- gislature must always depend , it will not be difficult to explain how the experiment miscarried so com- pletely with ...
Page 360
... sion of the law , and the law itself ( which is finely called by Aristotle mind without passion ) , has been al- ways the subject of abuse , and it may be accounted for without diffi- culty . Almost every man who enters into a law suit ...
... sion of the law , and the law itself ( which is finely called by Aristotle mind without passion ) , has been al- ways the subject of abuse , and it may be accounted for without diffi- culty . Almost every man who enters into a law suit ...
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afford America appears army assembly authority cacao Caracas character circumstances civil coast colour commerce conduct consequence consider coun Creoles dollars per cwt duty elector of Hesse ence England English equally error established evil expence exports force France French genius germen give Guayra Hanover Hanoverian heliacal heliacal rising Indians influence inhabitants interest Ireland Jews labour land lative legislator legislature less Literary Magazine living Lubec Maracaibo marriage ment military millions mind Missouri morality Moses mother country nations natural neral never nish object officers opinion Osage Osage river persons philosophy Pisces Pleiads political possession principles produce province rabbi racter radicle reason religion religious respect river royal says Siege of Damascus sion slaves Spain Spaniards Spanish Spanish colonies stranger tained talmud ther thing tion trade troops truth ture usury vernment vessels villages whole XXXVIII