Proceedings of the Albany Institute: 1865, Volumer 1-2

Forside
J. Munsell, 1873
 

Innhold

Del 1
1
Del 2
61
Del 3
141
Del 4
173
Del 5
175
Del 6
186
Del 7
187
Del 8
218
Del 15
270
Del 16
273
Del 17
283
Del 18
291
Del 19
305
Del 20
320
Del 21
337
Del 22
348

Del 9
227
Del 10
228
Del 11
233
Del 12
234
Del 13
247
Del 14
267
Del 23
349
Del 24
358
Del 25
361
Del 26
364
Del 27
380
Del 28
387

Andre utgaver - Vis alle

Vanlige uttrykk og setninger

Populære avsnitt

Side 378 - Columbia, the gem of the Ocean, The home of the brave and the free, The shrine of each patriot's devotion, A world offers homage to thee. Thy mandates make heroes assemble, When Liberty's form stands in view, Thy banners make tyranny tremble, When borne by the red, white and blue. When war winged its wide desolation, And threatened the land to deform, The ark then of freedom's foundation, Columbia, rode safe thro...
Side 344 - And he went forth unto the spring of the waters, and cast the salt in there, and said, Thus saith the LORD, I have healed these waters; there shall not be from thence any more death or barren land.
Side 129 - ... hydraulic power, when water is plentiful, might doubtless still be used with success. A vein of gold quartz also traverses the district. ' From Mariposa we wound our way upwards through a wooded country, and arrived about nine o'clock at our night quarters, " White and Hatch's," a pleasant, clean house standing at an elevation of 3,000 feet above the level of the sea, where we found the air pure, keen, and appetising, which enabled us to do ample justice to the really excellent repast furnished....
Side 321 - July last past, unanimously resolve that the reasons assigned by the Continental Congress for declaring the united colonies free and independent States are cogent and conclusive-; and that while we lament the cruel necessity which has rendered that measure unavoidable, we approve the same, and will, at the risk of our lives and fortunes, join with the other colonies in supporting it.
Side 283 - There exists a POWER, to which no limit in time or space is conceivable, of which all phenomena, as presented in consciousness, are manifestations, but which, we can know only through these manifestations.
Side 138 - HAVE of our especiall grace certaine knowledge and meere mocon given and Graunted And by these presents for us our heires and Successors DOE give and Graunt unto our dearest Brother James Duke of Yorke his heires and Assignes ALL that...
Side 145 - Lord, which those behold who go down to the sea in ships, and do business upon the great waters.
Side 282 - I feel proud of having it in my power to do so with truth, that it was not from ambitious views ; — it was not from ignorance of the hazard to which I knew I was exposing my reputation ; — it was not from an expectation of pecuniary compensation that I have yielded to the calls of my country ; — and that if my country has derived no benefit from my services, my fortune, in a pecuniary point of view, has received no augmentation from my country. — But in delivering this last sentiment, let...
Side 313 - I had described to her the previous evening — the abundant presence of which in her home, she had not suspected. From the serious nature of its depredations as above referred to but in part, the secrecy with which it conducts them, the extreme difficulty with any known appliance of eradicating it — it becomes very important, as a preventive against its alarming increase, that it should, from the outset, be combatted by all the means known to be efficacious against its allied forms, or which may...

Bibliografisk informasjon