The Life of Joseph Hodges Choate |
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Page 12
... tomorrow , and take as its consideration a mort- gage upon the same property for its full value . Is a tax upon the house one kind of tax and a tax upon the pro- ceeds of the house another ? It cannot be . A tax upon personality has all ...
... tomorrow , and take as its consideration a mort- gage upon the same property for its full value . Is a tax upon the house one kind of tax and a tax upon the pro- ceeds of the house another ? It cannot be . A tax upon personality has all ...
Page 29
... tomorrow , but the Irrigation Case seems hardly likely to be reached until next week . But I have so much to do in preparing for it and the Stanford case that I must stay here until they are argued . They are too important to leave and ...
... tomorrow , but the Irrigation Case seems hardly likely to be reached until next week . But I have so much to do in preparing for it and the Stanford case that I must stay here until they are argued . They are too important to leave and ...
Page 35
... tomorrow of the Stanford case , having concluded the Irrigation case yesterday . I have been brooding over them so long that my brain has hardly been able to hold any other thing . The milk case will be just nothing at all . " I have ...
... tomorrow of the Stanford case , having concluded the Irrigation case yesterday . I have been brooding over them so long that my brain has hardly been able to hold any other thing . The milk case will be just nothing at all . " I have ...
Page 37
... our Board . But I shall certainly go some time tomorrow . My case that I intended or was ready to argue here on Friday has gone off ' till November - another instance of my favorite theory that if I get ready all THE NINETIES 37.
... our Board . But I shall certainly go some time tomorrow . My case that I intended or was ready to argue here on Friday has gone off ' till November - another instance of my favorite theory that if I get ready all THE NINETIES 37.
Page 42
... tomorrow , and shall take great satisfaction in presenting their case to the Supreme Court . The Government took away their lands more than thirty seven years ago since which they have been applicants to Congress for compensation , and ...
... tomorrow , and shall take great satisfaction in presenting their case to the Supreme Court . The Government took away their lands more than thirty seven years ago since which they have been applicants to Congress for compensation , and ...
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afternoon Ambassador American Embassy April Balfour Bishop British called Carlton Gardens Carlton House Terrace Choate Choate's Club Conference Constitution course daughter DEAR MABEL December delightful dine dinner diplomatic duty election England English Evarts FATHER friends give Government Hague Hall Harvard Hay-Pauncefote Treaty hear heard honor hope hour interest invited John Harvard JOSEPH H JOSEPH HODGES CHOATE Judge June justice King Lady last night lawyers letter lives London looking Lord Lord Chancellor Lord Herschell Lord Lansdowne Lord Rosebery Lord Salisbury lunch Mama meeting morning nations never PAPA peace present President questions received Rufus Choate Saturday Secretary seems Senate sent Society speech spoke Stockbridge Sunday Supreme Court things thought tion told tomorrow took Treaty tribunal United Washington week whole Wife yesterday York
Popular passages
Page 303 - After God had carried us safe to New England, and we had builded our houses, provided necessaries for our livelihood, reared convenient places for God's worship, and settled the civil government, one of the next things we longed for and looked after was to advance learning and perpetuate it to posterity; dreading to leave an illiterate ministry to the churches, when our present ministers shall lie in the dust.
Page 365 - And we will then repair Unto the Bell at Edmonton All in a chaise and pair. My sister, and my sister's child, Myself and children three, Will fill the chaise ; so you must ride On horseback after we.
Page 295 - One army of the living God, To his command we bow ; Part of the host have crossed the flood, And part are crossing now.
Page 296 - So nigh is grandeur to our dust, So near is God to man, When Duty whispers low, Thou must, The youth replies, I can...
Page 61 - All things are full of labour ; man cannot utter it : the eye is not satisfied with seeing, nor the ear filled with hearing.
Page 303 - And as we were thinking and consulting how to effect this great work, it pleased God to stir up the heart of one Mr. Harvard (a godly gentleman, and a lover of learning, there living amongst us) to give the one half of his estate (it being in all about £1700) towards the erecting of a college, and all his library...
Page 165 - John Gilpin's spouse said to her dear, Though wedded we have been These twice ten tedious years, yet we No holiday have seen. To-morrow is our wedding-day, And we will then repair Unto the Bell at Edmonton All in a chaise and pair.
Page 55 - From that rough pine cradle, which is still preserved in the room where he was born, to his premature grave at the age of fifty-nine, it was one long course of training and discipline of mind and character, without pause or rest. It began with that well-thumbed and dog's-eared Bible from Hog Island, its leaves actually worn away by the pious hands that had turned them, read daily in the family from January to December, in at Genesis and out at Revelations every two years; and when a new child was...
Page 176 - ... which bears still his illustrious name. It is the smallest and at the same time the greatest street in the world, because it lies at the hub of the gigantic wheel which encircles the globe under the name of the British Empire. It is all American. I have shown you why it is called Downing Street. But why, Lord Salisbury, is it called a street? I have always thought that a street was a way through from one place to some other place. This does not come within that definition. I have heard it called...
Page 281 - Legislature, by the resistless power of the Press, or, worst of all, by the ruthless rapacity of an unbridled majority, to rescue the scapegoat and restore him to his proper place in the world—all this seemed to me to furnish a field worthy of any man's ambition.