| Edmund Burke - 1849 - 1012 pages
...no one state or section of our union. They were men from slaveholding and non-slaveholding states, from the north and the south, from the east and the west. They were all companions in-arms, and fellow-citizens of the same common country, engaged in the same... | |
| 1853 - 840 pages
...against these accusations, news came from different Missionary stations, of the ingathering of converts from the north and the south, from the east and the west. Idols once venerated, but now forsaken, are sent home as trophies; and messages full of evangelical... | |
| 1843 - 636 pages
...songs of Zion ā " harp notes of another sphere" ā rose softly above earth's Babel sounds! Gathered from the north and the south, from the east and the west, it was pleasing to trace the fellow-feeling existing among those widely dispersed of the Lord's flock,... | |
| Barent Gardenier - 1814 - 442 pages
...reins of government had dropped from the always nerveless, but now palsied hands of administration. From the north, and the south. from the east, and the west, the notice of danger was borne on every sĀ»'e- By land and water, we we rrere encircled with perils... | |
| Canonicus - 1828 - 164 pages
...ministers in such demand at home, that not one can be spared ? Is there no call for Orthodox clergymen from the north and the south, from the east and the west? Are Unitarians ignorant of the first principle of Orthodox benevolence, " there is that scattereth,... | |
| 1854 - 766 pages
...MISSIONARIES. ā The Board continues to receive the most earnest and affecting appeals for missionary aid. From the North and the South, from the East and the West, the Macedonian cry is raised, "Come over and help us!" Ah! how sadly do they describe their spiritual... | |
| 1822 - 658 pages
...hordes consisted of almost countless numbers. Clouds of flying cavalry, myriads cf savage barbarians, from the north and the south, from the east and the west, swelled their ranks. This furocioiis enemy did not content himself with committing his terrible ravages... | |
| 1837 - 638 pages
..."jasper column half upreared." Every poet, in every clime, has serenaded this empress of the sky ; from the north and the south, from the east and the west, the strain has ascended ; and yet our Wordsworth, in the fifth volume of the new edition of his poems,... | |
| American Home Missionary Society - 1841 - 766 pages
...by the instrumentality of your missionaries, since our last anniversary, be gathered here to night, from the North and the South, from the East and the West, they would be more than doubly sufficient to crowd this vast temple to its utmost extent. And could... | |
| John James Robert Manners Duke of Rutland - 1841 - 176 pages
...spoke, and pronounced its sad doom. VIII. ^ " Since o'er all our dominions, o'er ocean's vast breast, From the North and the South, from the East and the West, All the trade of the world by thy ships is conveyed, And submission by all to thy standard is paid... | |
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