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Funeral Oration -- On His Condemnation to Death -- On the Union of Greece to Resist Persia -- On the Crown -- The Second Oration Against Philip -- In Support of the Oppian Law -- To His Soldiers -- First Oration Against Catiline -- The Fourth Philippic -- To the Conspirators -- To His Troops -- On the Treatment of the Conspirators -- The Catilinarian Conspirators -- Oration on the Dead Body of Julius Caesar. -- A Second Crusade -- Sermon to the Birds -- Before the Diet of Worms -- On Suffering Persecution -- Before Invading Silesia, 1740 -- Before the Battle of Leuthen, 1757 -- Advocating the Execution of Louis XVI -- Agaist the Charge of Treason -- "To Dare again, Ever to Dare!" -- "Let France Be Free!" -- Defense Against the Charges -- The Festival of the Supreme Being -- At the Beginning of the Italian Campaign -- On Entering Milan -- On Beginning the Russian Campaign -- Farewell to the Old Guard -- Against Imperialism -- Voltaire -- To the Young Men of Italy -- To His Soldiers -- Rome and Italy -- America's Welcome -- To the Delegates from Alsace -- Appeal for Dreyfus -- Christian Democracy -- War and Armaments in Europe -- Germany and the War -- Address to the German People -- Last Speech -- The Spirit of France -- Coronation Day Sermon -- One Aim: Victory -- To Workingmen and Soldiers -- To the Red Army -- The Dictatorship of the Proletariat -- Napoleon -- Naval Disarmament. -- On the Dissolution of Parliament -- On a Moriton for His Removal -- God's Love to Fallen Man -- On the right of Taxing America -- Conciliation with America -- Indictment of Warren Hastings -- At the Trial of Warren Hastings -- On His Refusal to Negotiate with Bonaparte -- On Refusal to Negotiate with Bonaparte -- The Fall of Napoleon -- On the Reform Bill -- The Effects of Protection on Agriculture -- The "Trent" Affair -- Peace with Honor -- On Domestic and Foreign Affairs -- Anti-Semitism -- The British Empire -- Militant Suffragists -- England's Position -- An Appeal to the Nation -- The Fourth of July -- Peace -- Women in Politics -- On His Seventieth Birthday -- Justice for Ireland -- Protest Against Sentence as Traitor -- The Home Rule Bill -- The Irish Free State. -- Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God -- The Boston Massacre -- "Give Me Liberty, or Give Me Death!"-- American Independence -- On the Faults of the Constitution -- The States and the Federal Government -- Justice and the Federal Constitution -- The Federal Constitution -- Inaugural Address -- Farewell Address -- First Inaugural Address -- Alexander Hamilton -- Red Jacket -- Tecumseh -- Adams and Jefferson -- Reply to Hayne -- Second Inaugural Address -- The Murder of Lovejoy -- The Preservation of the Union -- Slavery -- On the Compromise of 1850 -- The Crime Against Kansas -- The Irrepressible Conflict -- On being Sentenced to Death -- On the Death of John Brown -- Reply to Lincoln -- On Withdrawal from the Union -- On His Nomination to the Senate -- Farewell Address at Springfield -- Address at Gettysburg -- Second Inaugural Address -- The System of Slavery -- On Woman's Right to Suffrage -- Blaine-The Plumed Knight -- Oration at His Brother's Grave -- On the Death of Garfield -- First Inaugural Address -- The Columbian Oration -- The American Standard -- The Cross of Gold -- The Republic That Never Retreats -- The Retention of the Philippines -- Address at Buffalo -- Manhood or Money -- The Strenuous Life -- Washington's Birthday -- Lincoln, Man and American -- Peace Without Victory -- Declaration of War -- The Fourteen Points -- The League of Nations -- The League of Nations -- On Receiving Sentence -- A Plea for the League of Nations -- "Live-I Am Coming!"
xxviii, 282 p. ;
ISBN/ISSN:
9781421411101 (pbk. : alk. paper)
Baltimore, MD : Johns Hopkins University Press, 2013.
9781421411101 (pbk. : alk. paper)
Gun policy lessons from the United States : keeping guns from high-risk individuals. -- Firearms and violent death in the United States / The limited impact of the Brady Act : evaluation and implications / Preventing gun violence involving people with serious mental illness / Evidence for optimism : policies to limit batterers' access to guns / Reconsidering the adequacy of current conditions on legal firearm ownership / Broadening denial criteria for the purchase and possession of firearms : need, feasibility, and effectiveness / Comprehensive background checks for firearm sales : evidence from gun shows / Preventing the diversion of guns to criminals through effective firearm sales laws / Spurring responsible firearms sales practices through litigation : the impact of New York City's lawsuits against gun dealers on interstate gun trafficking / Curtailing dangerous sales practices by licensed firearm dealers : legal opportunities and obstacles /
An oration on the abolition of the slave trade, delivered in the African Church, in the City of New York, January 1, 1808 / A thanksgiving sermon / Letters from a man of colour, on a late bill before the Senate of Pennsylvania. Letter I / To our patrons / The tears of a slave / Theresa, a Haytien tale / Gratitude ; Lines: on the evening and the morning ; Slavery ; Forbidden to ride on the street cars / Appeal to the coloured citizens of the world. Article I: our wretchedness in consequence of slavery / An address, delivered at the African Masonic Hall, Boston, February 27, 1833 / Ella: a sketch ; Family worship / Advice to young ladies ; Lines upon being examined in school studies for the preparation of a teacher ; The infant class, written in school / What are the colored people doing for themselves? ; To my old master ; The heroic slave / Letter from William W. Brown, Adelphi Hotel, York, March 26, 1851 ; Letter from William Wells Brown, Oxford, Sept. 10th, 1851 ; Clotel, or, The president's daughter. Chapter I: the negro sale ; Visit of a fugitive slave to the grave of Wilberforce ; My Southern home, or, The South and its people. Chapter IX / "Heads of the colored people," done with a whitewash brush ; The black news-vendor ; The washerwoman ; The sexton ; The schoolmaster / From our Brooklyn correspondent, May 13, 1852 ; Afric-American picture gallery, number I / America ; Prayer of the oppressed ; A poem / To Mrs. Harriet B. Stowe ; On the death of my sister Cecilia, the last of five members of the family, who died successively ; An epitaph / Eliza Harris ; The slave auction ; Bury me in a free land ; Enlightened motherhood: an address ... before the Brooklyn Literary Society, November 15, 1892 / Sketches of slave life, or, Illustrations of the "peculiar institution." The blood of the slave ; Slaves on the auction block / From The repeal of the Missouri Compromise considered ; Loguen's position / The Rev. J.W. Loguen, as a slave and as a freeman. Chapter I-II ; Letter to Rev. J.W. Loguen, from his old mistress, and Mr. Loguen's reply / Blake, or, The huts of America. Chapter VI: Henry's return ; Chapter VII: Master and slave ; Chapter VIII: The sale ; Chapter IX: The runaway / Our nig: sketches from the life of a free black. Chapter I: Mag Smith, my mother ; Chapter II: My father's death ; Chapter III: A new home for me / Incidents in the life of a slave girl. Chapter I: Childhood ; Chapter II: The new master and mistress ; Chapter V: The trials of girlhood ; Chapter VI: The jealous mistress / Liberia ; To Madame Selika / The New York riot / Poetry and poets. Part I, II, IV ; The critic / Neglected opportunities ; On horse back: saddle dash, no. I / Thanksgiving Day sermon: the social principle among a people and its bearing on their progress and development / Lincoln: written for the occasion of the unveiling of the freedmen's monument in memory of Abraham Lincoln, April 14, 1876 ; To my father ; Toussaint L'Ouverture ; In memoriam: Paul Laurence Dunbar / Black and white: land, labor, and politics in the South. Chapter XII: civilization degrades the masses ; The conclave: to the ladies of Tuskegee School ; Love's divinest power ; Come away, love / The goophered grapevine ; Tobe's tribulations ; The free colored people of North Carolina / A mother's love ; Wilberforce ; The black Samson ; An epitaph / A voice from the South. Womanhood: a vital element in the regeneration and progress of a race / A hero in ebony: a Pullman porter's story ; Hanover, or, The persecution of the lowly: a story of the Wilmington massacre. Chapter V: Molly Pierrepont ; Henry Berry Lowery, the North Carolina outlaw: a tale of the Reconstruction period / Southern horrors: lynch law in all its phases. Preface ; The offense ; The black and white of it / The intellectual progress of colored women since the Emancipation Proclamation / An autobiography: the story of the Lord's dealings with Mrs. Amanda Smith, the colored evangelist. Chapter XXXI / The newsboy ; Afro-American boy ; The warrior's lay ; Soul visions ; The superannuate / The white problem / The value of race literature: an address delivered at the First Congress of Colored Women of the United States / De linin' ub de hymns ; Stickin' to de hoe / Unexpressed ; Frederick Douglass ; When Malindy sings ; A Negro love song ; Little brown baby ; Dawn ; Compensation / Voices ; Heart-throbs ; The nation's evil / Imperium in imperio. Chapter I: a small beginning ; Chapter II: the school ; Chapter III: the parson's advice ; Chapter IV: the turning of a worm / The American Negro: what he was, what he is, and what he may become. Chapter VII: moral lapses / A Georgia episode / Hagar's daughter: a story of Southern caste prejudice. Chapter IV-V / The snapping of the bow ; Me 'n' Dunbar ; Juny at the gate ; The black cat club: Negro humor & folk-lore. Chapter I: the club introduced / The path of life ; The battleground ; The problem / The octoroon's revenge / Love's wayfaring ; Golden moonrise ; In the athenaeum looking out on the granary burying ground on a rainy day in November / What happened to Scott: an episode of election day / Bernice, the octoroon / Credo ; A litany of Atlanta ; The burden of black women ; My country, 'tis of thee / The preacher's wife, dedicated to the wives of the itinerant preachers of the M.E. Church ; Apple sauce and chicken fried ; To a spring in the Cumberlands ; The bachelor girl / What it means to be colored in the capital of the United States / From As to the leopard's spots: an open letter to Thomas Dixon, Jr. / An unheeded signal / Freedom at McNealy's ; The husband's return ; A home greeting / Johnny's pet superstition ; Mrs. Johnson objects ; The Easter bonnet ; A lullaby / The new Negro / Grant and Lee ; Uncle Remus to Massa Joel ; The Confederate veteran and the old-time darky ; Negro love song / Old maid's soliloquy ; What's mo' temptin' to de palate /
Ideological origins. Of Plimoth Plantation, 1650 / A modell of Christian charity, 1630 / Letter to Lord Kames, April 11, 1767 / Expansion in the early republic. A Commissioner's view of the Ohio River Valley, 1785 / To the Commissioners of the United States, August 16, 1793 / The American geography, 1792 / Letter to Thomas Dwight, October 31, 1803 / Second Inaugural Address, March 4, 1805 / Appeal to the Osages, 1811 / Pushing West. State of the Union Address, December 6, 1830 / Encroachment by white settlers, 1832 / Memorial and protest of the Cherokee Nation, June 22, 1836 ; A plea for the West, 1835 / On land-lust in America, 1837 / An encounter between Omaha hunters and white squatters in Iowa, 1853 / A fur trapper's view of manifest destiny, 1839 / The great nation of futurity, November 1839 / Two years before the mast, 1840 / The young American, 1844 / Texas and Oregon. Letter to President Guadalupe Victoria, June 30, 1828 / Letter in favor of the reannexation of Texas, January 8, 1844 / Letter to the citizens of Worcester County, Massachusetts, January 23, 1844 / Inaugural address, March 4, 1845 / Uncle Sam's Song to Miss Texas, 1845 ; Annexation, July-August 1845 / Arbitration of the Oregon question, January 3, 1846 / War for empire. Diary entry, June 30, 1846 / Protesting the Mexican War, 1880 / Life on the Rio Grande, April 1847 / American workingmen, versus slavery, September 1, 1847 / Speech at Lexington, Kentucky, November 13, 1847 / Public meeting in favor of annexing all of Mexico, January 30, 1848 / Origin of the war with the United States, 1848 / Expanded horizons : Cuba, Hawaii, and Central America. Appeal to the inhabitants of Cuba, April 27, 1848 / The benefits of annexing Cuba, 1850 / The Ostend Manifesto, 1854 / The "Ostend Doctrine" : practical Democrats carrying out the principle, 1856 / Traveling through the Pacific, 1859 / Nicaragua Ho!, January 1856 / Political destiny of the colored race on the American continent, August 24, 1854 / A Jamaican's view of Americans in Panama, 1857 / Sectionalism trumps manifest destiny. The war in Nicaragua, 1860 / Hostility to southern interests, May 31, 1858 / Why southerners should oppose territorial expansion, January 15, 1855 / Manifest destiny reevaluated and redeemed. American progress, ca. 1873 / Trouble on the Paiute Reservation, 1865 / The march of the flag, September 16, 1898 / A chronology of manifest destiny and American territorial expansion Questions for consideration ; Selected bibliography.
ancients -- The Ten Commandments (second millennium BC) / danger in teaching ... (479 BC) / They were worthy of Athens (431 BC) / Socrates' Apology (399 BC) / Beatitudes (AD 34) / Sermon on the Mount (AD 34) / I made my journey ... unto Damascus (AD 50s) / Dig this foundation of lowliness deep in thee (AD 408) /