 | Lingual reader - 1853
...and weighty words. The papers have carried their orations, and scattered them from the great lakes to the Gulf of Mexico, and from the Atlantic to the Pacific oceans. The ministers of Christ, in all lands, have spoken in it. They are speaking still. Millions... | |
 | 1853
...Oregon Territory. The territory of the United States of America extends from the British possessions to the Gulf of Mexico, and from the Atlantic to the Pacific Ocean. It consists of many separate states in it federal union. The present republic of Mexico, extending... | |
 | 1855
...those of the North American pigeon, the very " herrings of the air," as they have, most uupoetically, been called. Like them, however, they appear in astounding...they unite in millions to seek a comfortable home. Their numbers are far beyond all computation; they darken the heavens with their vast armies, and break... | |
 | 1855
...those of the North American pigeon, the very " herrings of the air," as they have, most unpoetically, been called. Like them, however, they appear in astounding...broodtime, they unite in millions to seek a comfortable homo. Their numbers are far beyond all computation; they darken the heavens with their vast armies,... | |
 | Maximilian Schele de Vere - 1855 - 291 páginas
...those of the North American pigeon, the very "herrings of the air," as they have, most unpoetically, been called. Like them, however, they appear in astounding...continent, from Hudson's Bay to the Gulf of Mexico, and froirf the Atlantic to the Pacific. About broodtime, they unite in millions to seek a comfortable home.... | |
 | 1855
...those of the North American pigeon, the very " herrings of the air," as they have, mostuupoetically, been called. Like them, however, they appear in astounding...and are found alike all over this continent, from Hndson's Bay to the Gulf of Mexico, and from the Atlantic to the Pacific. About broodtime, they unite... | |
 | George Robertson - 1855 - 404 páginas
...its auspices you have grown and prospered beyond example — your will rules from the Northern Lakes to the Gulf of Mexico, and from the Atlantic to the Pacific Ocean — every citizen is a sovereign in his sphere, and every freeman is as free and secure as he... | |
 | Francis Wayland - 1855
...such as never before existed. Within the limits of the United States, stretching from the great Lakes to the Gulf of Mexico, and from the Atlantic to the Pacific, there are millions of acres of as good land as the sun shines upon, Avhich may be had almost for the... | |
 | Hugh Blair Grigsby - 1855 - 206 páginas
...descend to the grave;* that a nation of fourteen millions of people, stretching from the Northern lakes to the Gulf of Mexico and from the Atlantic to the Pacific, should testify their grief by the flowing of tears, by the tolling of bells, by the thunders of artillery,... | |
 | Francis Wayland - 1857 - 336 páginas
...last prevailed, and the principles of Roger Williams now bear undisputed sway from the St. Lawrence to the Gulf of Mexico, and from the Atlantic to the Pacific. These are some of the points in. which the progress of opinion, in other denominations, has tended... | |
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