History of the Origin, Formation, and Adoption of the Constitution of the United States, with Notices of Its Principal Framers, Volum 2Harper, 1863 |
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Side 5
... secure their per- manent prosperity and happiness . That the States had national interests ; that each of them stood in relations to the others , and to the rest of the world , which its separate and unaided power was unable to manage ...
... secure their per- manent prosperity and happiness . That the States had national interests ; that each of them stood in relations to the others , and to the rest of the world , which its separate and unaided power was unable to manage ...
Side 9
... secure them ? Who was to stand as their guarantor and protector , and to vindicate the right of the majority to govern and alter and modify ? Who was to enforce the rules which the people of a State had prescribed for their own action ...
... secure them ? Who was to stand as their guarantor and protector , and to vindicate the right of the majority to govern and alter and modify ? Who was to enforce the rules which the people of a State had prescribed for their own action ...
Side 12
... secure ; and that a Convention of all the States , for the purpose of revising and amending the Articles of Confederation , was the most probable means of establishing a firm general government , and was therefore to be held . But what ...
... secure ; and that a Convention of all the States , for the purpose of revising and amending the Articles of Confederation , was the most probable means of establishing a firm general government , and was therefore to be held . But what ...
Side 13
... secure the general welfare . The first of these classes of objects could be ascertained by reference to the terms and provisions of the Articles of Confederation ; the second could only be ascer- tained by resorting to the history of ...
... secure the general welfare . The first of these classes of objects could be ascertained by reference to the terms and provisions of the Articles of Confederation ; the second could only be ascer- tained by resorting to the history of ...
Side 14
... secure their independence of the crown of Great Britain . We have seen that , from the jealousies of the States , even this Congress never assumed the whole revolutionary authority which its situation and office would have entitled it ...
... secure their independence of the crown of Great Britain . We have seen that , from the jealousies of the States , even this Congress never assumed the whole revolutionary authority which its situation and office would have entitled it ...
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History of the Origin, Formation, and Adoption of the Constitution ..., Volum 2 George Ticknor Curtis Uten tilgangsbegrensning - 1860 |
History of the Origin, Formation, and Adoption of the Constitution ..., Volum 2 George Ticknor Curtis Uten tilgangsbegrensning - 1861 |
History of the Origin, Formation, and Adoption of the Constitution ..., Volum 2 George Ticknor Curtis Uten tilgangsbegrensning - 1865 |
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