The Whig Ideal: Politics and Character in Antebellum AmericaUniversity of Wisconsin--Madison, 2001 - 297 halaman |
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Halaman 199
... “ especially among the unflinching , uncompromising Democrats ... a name is always half the battle . " The Whigs had long railed against Andrew 218 [ bid . , 59-62 . Jackson and his followers for exactly this type of verbal 192.
... “ especially among the unflinching , uncompromising Democrats ... a name is always half the battle . " The Whigs had long railed against Andrew 218 [ bid . , 59-62 . Jackson and his followers for exactly this type of verbal 192.
Halaman 218
... half - century of the American republic . Longstreet hoped that the Sentinel's comic sketches would improve the moral condition of its readers , just as Addison , whom Longstreet admired and read , had used humor to shape British ...
... half - century of the American republic . Longstreet hoped that the Sentinel's comic sketches would improve the moral condition of its readers , just as Addison , whom Longstreet admired and read , had used humor to shape British ...
Halaman 246
... half - dozen other locales . " The shifty Captain Suggs , " his biographer attests , " is a miracle of shrewdness . He possesses , in an eminent degree , that tact which enables him to detect the soft spots in his fellow [ man ] ...
... half - dozen other locales . " The shifty Captain Suggs , " his biographer attests , " is a miracle of shrewdness . He possesses , in an eminent degree , that tact which enables him to detect the soft spots in his fellow [ man ] ...
Isi
THE MORAL VISION OF THE AMERICAN WHIGS | 23 |
Balance as Virtue Passion | 40 |
Charles Brickett | 54 |
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Istilah dan frasa umum
according achieve American Whig Review Andrew antebellum appeared balance Baldwin bank become biographers called campaign candidate career cause character citizens Clay's College Common Sense concerns continued course criticism culture Daniel Democratic dueling early editor election example explained faculties Harrison helped Henry Clay History Hooper hoped human humor ideas important improvement individual influence institutions intellectual interests issues italics Jackson John Journal Kennedy Kennedy's leading lives Longstreet means mind moral moral vision nature noted observed offered opinion original partisan passions Pendleton philosophy political popular position practice president principles promote published questions Quodlibet readers Reid represented Republic republican rhetoric satire Scottish sketches social society South Speeches story Suggs thinking Thomas thought tradition turned United University Press virtue vision Whig party writers York young