hide
Named Entity Searches
hide
Matching Documents
The documents where this entity occurs most often are shown below. Click on a document to open it.
Document | Max. Freq | Min. Freq | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
The Daily Dispatch: April 4, 1862., [Electronic resource] | 9 | 1 | Browse | Search |
View all matching documents... |
Your search returned 9 results in 4 document sections:
What is the spirit of the South?
The London Times, in one of the most intelligent articles which, has yet appeared on American articles, sate forth the impossibility of conquering the South, If the South is really in earnth.
Everything, in its view, depends upon the simple point, in the South in earnest?
It refer to the vast extent of Southern territory and the courage of its defender, and says the North is imitating the folly of Napoleon in his Russian campaign and of George the Third in the American Revolution.
The same cause which referred the British monarch, says the Times, will defeat the North, but all depends upon whether the South is in earnest.
There never was more truth expressed in the earns number of words.
Certainly, if we are not in earnest, we have become a most degenerate race since the days of 76.
The men of those days were terribly in earnest, and yet we doubt whether they had the same personal animosity to their British enemies, and we know they had
The Daily Dispatch: April 4, 1862., [Electronic resource], Before Hughes as Napoleon 's preference for the Papacy (search)
Before Hughes as Napoleon's preference for the Papacy
--From the paris correspondence of the London Herald, we extract the following:
Of all the projects said to the agitating the Imperial brain, that of nominating Archbishop Hughes to be the successor of his spiritual advisor, is the newest, and to some the most astonishing while to others it is only a Further proof of the resource and penetration of the Third Napoleon.
The project has not been widely circulated as one fully decided by the Emperor.
But is in sufficiently talked of in some circles to be worthy or attention, however, under all the reserves which must be made in respect to the on dits of Paris.
The different interview which the Irish American prelate has had with Iris Imperial Majesty, would, in themselves, have been sufficient to give rise to an extraordinary amount of gossip; but when it is generally understood that he was asked several times to lunch at the Tulleries and positively blessed the Prince Im