Читать книгу Choice Specimens of American Literature, and Literary Reader - Benj. N. Martin - Страница 9
=6.= ORATORS, AND LEGAL AND POLITICAL WRITERS, OF THE ERA SUBSEQUENT TO THE REVOLUTION.
ОглавлениеAlexander Hamilton, 1757–1804 66. Nature of the Federal Debt. 67. The French Revolution.
Fisher Ames, 1758–1808
68. Obligation of National Good Faith.
Gouverneur Morris, 1752–1816
69. Qualifications of a Minister of Foreign Affairs.
William Pinkney, 1764–1820
70. Responsibility for Slavery.
71. American Belligerent Rights.
James Madison, 1751–1836
72. Value of a Record of the Debates on the Federal Constitution.
73. Inscription for a Statue of Washington.
John Randolph, 1773–1832 74. Change is not Reform. 75. The Error of Decayed Families.
James Kent, 1763–1847
76. Law of the States.
Edward Livingston, 1764–1836
77. The Proper Office of the Judge.
John Quincy Adams, 1767–1848
78. The Right of Petition Universal.
79. The Administration of Washington.
Henry Clay, 1777–1852 80. Emancipation of the South American States. 81. Dangers of Disunion.
John C. Calhoun, 1782–1850 82. Dangers of an Unlimited Power of Removal from Office. 83. Peculiar merit of our Political System. 84. Concurrent Majorities supersede Force.
Daniel Webster, 1782–1852
85. Inestimable Value of the Federal Union;—Extract from the Reply
to Hayne.
86. Object of the Bunker Hill Monument.
87. Benefits of the U.S. Constitution.
88. Right of changing Allegiance.
Joseph Story, 1779–1845 89. Chief Justice Marshall. 90. Progress of Jurisprudence.
Lewis Cass, 1782–1866 91. Policy of Removing the Indians.
Rufus Choate, 1799–1859 92. Conservative Force of the American Bar. 93. The Age of the Pilgrims the Heroic Period of our History.
William H. Seward, 1801–1872
94. Military Services of Lafayette in America.
Abraham Lincoln, 1809–1865
95. Obligation to the Patriot Dead.
Charles Sumner, 1811–1873 96. Prospective Results of the Kansas and Nebraska Bill. 97. Heroic Effort cannot Fail. 98. Our Foreign Relations. 99. Prophetic Voices about America.
Alexander H. Stephens, 1812- 100. Origin of the American Flag.