History of the United States: From the Earliest Period to the Administration of James Buchanan, 第 3 卷Johnson, Fry, 1866 |
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第 1 到 5 筆結果,共 93 筆
第 34 頁
... Britain . " Every eye in the United States , " he says , in concluding his letter , " is now fixed on the affairs of Louisiana . Per- haps nothing since the Revolutionary War , has produced more uneasy sensa- tions through the body of ...
... Britain . " Every eye in the United States , " he says , in concluding his letter , " is now fixed on the affairs of Louisiana . Per- haps nothing since the Revolutionary War , has produced more uneasy sensa- tions through the body of ...
第 36 頁
... Britain ; and the whole course of subsequent history must have been quite different from what it was . How singular are the changes pro- duced in the history of the world by what seem to be very slight and insuf- ficient causes ! The ...
... Britain ; and the whole course of subsequent history must have been quite different from what it was . How singular are the changes pro- duced in the history of the world by what seem to be very slight and insuf- ficient causes ! The ...
第 39 頁
... - land by invasion ! " At the very time that hostilities broke out afresh , in May , 1803 , between France and Great Britain , Napoleon , presuming that no delay in the ratifica- Washington , ratified the cession of Lou- isiana to the.
... - land by invasion ! " At the very time that hostilities broke out afresh , in May , 1803 , between France and Great Britain , Napoleon , presuming that no delay in the ratifica- Washington , ratified the cession of Lou- isiana to the.
第 40 頁
... Britain , it might em- broil her with America . The treaty , which had just been con- cluded , first of all set forth the claims of France to the territory , by the ces- sion of Spain , and formally renounced them in favor of the United ...
... Britain , it might em- broil her with America . The treaty , which had just been con- cluded , first of all set forth the claims of France to the territory , by the ces- sion of Spain , and formally renounced them in favor of the United ...
第 72 頁
... Britain looked with no fa- vorable eye upon these advantages which neutrals enjoyed from commer- cial intercourse with France and her allies ; and she determined to interpose her power in order to put a stop to all trade of the kind ...
... Britain looked with no fa- vorable eye upon these advantages which neutrals enjoyed from commer- cial intercourse with France and her allies ; and she determined to interpose her power in order to put a stop to all trade of the kind ...
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