| Fisher Ames - 1854 - 440 páginas
...constitutionality of the treaty ; so much answer to so little weight of objection is odds. He holds up the aegis against a wooden sword. Jove's eagle holds his bolts...democratic speech, although it is the second week of the court-sitting. To-morrow wisdom opens her mouth. It is said, he has twice or thrice new modelled his... | |
| Fisher Ames - 1854 - 440 páginas
...constitutionality of the treaty ; so much answer to so little weight of objection is odds. He holds up the aegis against a wooden sword. Jove's eagle holds his bolts...democratic speech, although it is the second week of the court-sitting. To-morrow wisdom opens her mouth. It is said, he has twice or thrice new modelled his... | |
| John Church Hamilton - 1868 - 852 páginas
...weight of objection is odd. He holds up the .Kgis against a wooden sword. Jove's eagle holds his bolt! in his talons, and hurls them, not at the Titans, but at i/xirnxei and nier." the War; personal and party rivalships seeking to displace the organ of its negotiation... | |
| Alexander Hamilton - 1973 - 586 páginas
...constitutionality of the treaty; 19 so much answer to so little weight of objection is odd. He holds up the aegis against a wooden sword. Jove's eagle holds his bolts...objections in which blockheads only are sincere." 20 Modern biographers have tended to reflect the interest and values — one might even say biases... | |
| Stanley M. Elkins, Eric McKitrick - 1995 - 952 páginas
...had enough. Fisher Ames thought "so much answer to so little weight of objection is [at] odds. . . . Jove's eagle holds his bolts in his talons, and hurls them, not at the Titans, but at sparrows and mice."178 By early September 1795, two critical pieces of news had reached the frontier settlements... | |
| Jared Sparks, Edward Everett, James Russell Lowell, Henry Cabot Lodge - 1855 - 576 páginas
...constitutionality of the treaty ; so much answer to so little weight of objection is odds. He holds up the eegis against a wooden sword. Jove's eagle holds his bolts...objections in which blockheads only are sincere." The following letter to Jeremiah Smith gives a lively picture of the man and the circumstances in which... | |
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