Public Opinion, Volume 3Public Opinion Company, 1887 - American periodicals |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 87
Page 1
... carry this city by 10,000 votes . That seems to us to be the lesson of the campaign just ended . THE Labor party can participate with the Republican party in the grat- ification that the election has resulted in a victory for these ...
... carry this city by 10,000 votes . That seems to us to be the lesson of the campaign just ended . THE Labor party can participate with the Republican party in the grat- ification that the election has resulted in a victory for these ...
Page 7
... carry him from savagery to barbarism , and yet other ages to take him from barbarism to his present condition . All through this prolonged process of evolution he has been submitted to the moulding influence of external conditions . He ...
... carry him from savagery to barbarism , and yet other ages to take him from barbarism to his present condition . All through this prolonged process of evolution he has been submitted to the moulding influence of external conditions . He ...
Page 9
... carry that doubtful State . There is no profounder admirer of Mr. Blaine than the Inquirer ; no other that has more ... carry it or the one that can give the most satisfactory assurances of carrying it . We are compelled to agree with ...
... carry that doubtful State . There is no profounder admirer of Mr. Blaine than the Inquirer ; no other that has more ... carry it or the one that can give the most satisfactory assurances of carrying it . We are compelled to agree with ...
Page 10
... carry the State by dividing the party against him . " THE STERLING HONESTY OF THE PRESIDENT . " New York Graphic ... carried the country , and if they had lost they would have lost with honor . If they should show the country in 1888 ...
... carry the State by dividing the party against him . " THE STERLING HONESTY OF THE PRESIDENT . " New York Graphic ... carried the country , and if they had lost they would have lost with honor . If they should show the country in 1888 ...
Page 11
... carrying New York . His transcendent financial ability , when Secretary of the Treasury , gave him the confidence of ... carry the electoral vote of New York . ' Lynchburg , Va . , News ( Dem . ) . Ir the Solid South is not broken until ...
... carrying New York . His transcendent financial ability , when Secretary of the Treasury , gave him the confidence of ... carry the electoral vote of New York . ' Lynchburg , Va . , News ( Dem . ) . Ir the Solid South is not broken until ...
Contents
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169 | |
189 | |
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283 | |
289 | |
389 | |
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497 | |
521 | |
545 | |
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Common terms and phrases
American believe better Blaine Boston called candidate cause cent Chicago Christian church citizens Congress Democracy Democratic party doubt election England English evil fact favor France friends George William Curtis give Government high license honor human immigration industry interest issue John Sherman Journal Rep Knights of Labor labor land liquor literary London matter means ment moral Mugwumps nature never nomination Ohio organization paper Paul Globe Philadelphia political popular present President Cleveland Presidential principles prohibition Prohibition party Prohibitionists PUBLIC OPINION question railroad recent reform renomination Republican party result Rhode Island saloon says Senator sentiment Sherman social society Solid South South Southern spirit story success temperance thing ticket tion to-day Translated for PUBLIC Tribune Rep Union United vote Washington women York York Sun York Tribune York World
Popular passages
Page 107 - You hear that boy laughing? You think he's all fun. But the angels laugh, too, at the good he has done. The children laugh loud as they troop to his call. And the poor man that knows him laughs loudest of all.
Page 107 - There are three different sorts of contempt. One kind of contempt is, scandalizing the Court itself. There may be likewise a contempt of this Court, in abusing parties who are concerned in causes here. There may be also a contempt of this Court, in prejudicing mankind against persons, before the cause is heard.
Page 207 - ... the conditions of human life 'which would naturally give rise to religious beliefs, customs, and traditions, and then shows how the existence of such a thing as folk-lore is recognized when it is observed that there either exists or has existed, among the least cultured of the inhabitants of all the countries of modern Europe, a vast body of curious beliefs, customs, and narratives which are by tradition handed from generation to generation. These are essentially the property of the least-advanced...
Page 222 - I am in the most entire and hearty sympathy. It is a great many years since, at the outset of my career, I had to think seriously what life had to offer that was worth having. I came to the conclusion that the chief good, for me, was freedom to learn, think, and say what I pleased, when I pleased. I have acted on that conviction, and have availed myself of the "rara temporum felicitas ubi sentire qusB velis, et quae sentias dicere licet...
Page 22 - And if man cou'd have reason, none has more, That made his Paunch so rich and him so poor. With wealth he was not trusted, for...
Page 72 - With the possible exception of Lowell and Matthew Arnold, he was the ablest critical essayist of his time, and the place he has left will not be readily filled. Scarcely inferior to Macaulay in brilliance of diction and graphic portraiture, he was freer from, prejudice and passion, and more loyal to the truth of fact and history. He was a thoroughly honest man. He wrote with conscience always at his elbow, and never sacrificed his real convictions for the sake of epigram and antithesis. He instinctively...
Page 20 - As Kant said, on a like occasion, if anybody can answer that question, he is just the man I want to see. If he says that consciousness cannot exist, except in relation of cause and effect with certain organic molecules, I must ask how he knows that ; and if he says it can, I must put the same question.
Page 66 - for the advancement and prosecution of scientific research in its broadest sense, " now amounts to §26,000. As accumulated income will be available in December next, the trustees desire to receive applications for appropriations in aid of scientific work. This endowment is not for the benefit of any one department of science, but it is the intention of the trustees to give the preference to those investigations...
Page 107 - As I approve of a youth, that has something of the old man in him, so I am no less pleased with an old man, that has something of the youth.
Page 19 - So with respect to immortality. As physical science states this problem, it seems to stand thus : " Is there any means of knowing whether the series of states of consciousness, which has been casually associated for threescore years and ten with the arrangement and movements of innumerable millions of successively different material molecules, can be continued, in like association, with some substance which has not the properties of matter and force...