The Public Life of Thomas Cooper, 1783-1839 |
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Page vii
... of the Union , 1827-1830 307 XI . The President and the Priesthood , 1829-1833 337 XII . Diversions of Old Age , 1833-1839 368 Conclusion Bibliographical Note 394 402 Index 417 · I PREFACE It is my hope that this study of.
... of the Union , 1827-1830 307 XI . The President and the Priesthood , 1829-1833 337 XII . Diversions of Old Age , 1833-1839 368 Conclusion Bibliographical Note 394 402 Index 417 · I PREFACE It is my hope that this study of.
Page 49
... Union between rival Nations . Who entertains no Sentiments of Compassion , but for the rich and the great , the Kings , and the nobles of the earth ! Who can contemplate with- out emotion , the prospect of Bloodshed and Devastation ...
... Union between rival Nations . Who entertains no Sentiments of Compassion , but for the rich and the great , the Kings , and the nobles of the earth ! Who can contemplate with- out emotion , the prospect of Bloodshed and Devastation ...
Page 103
... union , of preference to French interests , and enmity to our country : and this in terms of gross , persevering , and most ungentleman - like abuse . " ? Thus he took strongest ground on the most significant part of the Jeffersonian ...
... union , of preference to French interests , and enmity to our country : and this in terms of gross , persevering , and most ungentleman - like abuse . " ? Thus he took strongest ground on the most significant part of the Jeffersonian ...
Page 189
... union on broad and general principles well understood and digested , until the American union . The guiding principle that pervades every republic upon this continent , is that which Dr. Priestley has so happily adopted and so well ...
... union on broad and general principles well understood and digested , until the American union . The guiding principle that pervades every republic upon this continent , is that which Dr. Priestley has so happily adopted and so well ...
Page 194
... union and join England if they could . Thus op- position in those states to the mercantile predilection for British goods , politics , and government would be strengthened and the contemplated schemes of disunion would probably be ...
... union and join England if they could . Thus op- position in those states to the mercantile predilection for British goods , politics , and government would be strengthened and the contemplated schemes of disunion would probably be ...
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Common terms and phrases
action Adams advocate American appeared appointment April asserted attack August Aurora Biddle Buren charge Charleston chemistry citizens City Gazette claimed clergy Columbia Congress constitution controversy Cooper to Jefferson Courier court defended democratic discussion doctrines doubtless Duane edition editor election England Essays expressed favor federal Federalist felt freedom governor History hostility Ibid interest Jacobins Jefferson Papers John Adams Joseph Priestley judge July later learning lectures legislature letter Madison Mahlon Dickerson Manchester March March 17 March 29 ment Mercury Nicholas Biddle Northumberland Northumberland Gazette nullification opinion opposed pamphlet party Pennsylvania Philadelphia philosophical position Presbyterians president Priestley Priestley's principles probably published question referred reform regarded religious reply Republican revolution Sedition senate Sept society South Carolina College southern tariff Telescope Tench Coxe Thomas Cooper thought tion trial trustees Union University University of Virginia Virginia Walker writings wrote
Popular passages
Page 52 - Because half a dozen grasshoppers under a fern make the field ring with their importunate chink, whilst thousands of great cattle, reposed beneath the shadow of the British oak, chew the cud and are silent, pray do not imagine, that those who make the noise are the only inhabitants of the field...
Page 21 - I would not have a slave to till my ground, To carry me, to fan me while I sleep, And tremble when I wake, for all the wealth That sinews bought and sold have ever earn'd.
Page 405 - A Treatise on the Law of Libel and the Liberty of the Press; Showing the Origin, Use, and Abuse of the Law of Libel: With Copious Notes and References to Authorities in Great Britain and the United States: As Applicable to Individuals and to Political and Ecclesiastical Bodies and Principles.
Page 287 - inferior variety of the human species; and not capable of the same improvement as the whites." Dr. SC Cartwright of the University of Louisiana insisted that the capacities of the Negro adult for learning were equal to those of a white infant; and the Negro could properly perform certain physiological functions only when under the control of white men. Because of the Negro's inferiority...
Page 307 - Is it worth our while to continue this union of states, where the north demand to be our masters, and we are required to be their tributaries...
Page 410 - An Account of the Trial of Thomas Cooper of Northumberland on a Charge of Libel Against the President of the United States; Taken in Short Hand, with a Preface, Notes, and Appendix, by Thomas Cooper (Philadelphia, John Bioren, printer, 1800).
Page 352 - I am not yet conquered, and expect yet to bivouac on the field of Battle. I have no objection to a moral governor of the universe, but how came he in that character to create the Priesthood ? Moral ! You might as well apply squareness to virtue. I wish I knew how to account for moral and physical evil, and then I should be able to account for malaria, dyspepsia, yellow fever, the plague, cholera, rattlesnakes, mosquitoes and faquirs of all classes and orders, asiatic and european, papist and protestant.
Page 124 - But in the present state of affairs, the press is open to those who will praise, while the threats of the law hang over those who blame the conduct of the men in power.
Page 402 - AN APPEAL to the Government and Congress of the United States, against the Depredations committed by American Privateers, on the Commerce of Nations at peace with us. By an American Citizen.
Page 198 - ... Judge Cooper, of Pennsylvania, a political refugee with Dr. Priestley from the fires and mobs of Birmingham. He is one of the ablest men in America, and that in several branches of science. The law opinion which he mentions I have received, and a more luminous one has not been seen. The best pieces on political economy which have been written in this country were by Cooper.