| Benjamin Franklin - 1818 - 542 páginas
...conveying letters not very regular, a year's . silence between friends must needs give uneasiness. Our new constitution is now established, and has an appearance...permanency: but in this world nothing can be said to.be certain, except death and taxes! My health continues much as it has been for some time, except... | |
| Benjamin Franklin - 1833 - 490 páginas
...conveying letters not very regular, a year's silence between friends must needs give uneasiness. Our new constitution is now established, and has an appearance...continues much as it has been for some time, except that I grow thinner and 'weaker; so that I cannot expect to hold out much longer. My respects to your good... | |
| Benjamin Franklin - 1840 - 896 páginas
...conveying letters not very regular, a year's silence between friends must needs give uneasiness. Our new Constitution is now established, and has an. appearance...continues much as it has been for some time, except that I grow thinner and weaker, so that I cannot expect to hold out much longer. My respects to your good... | |
| Benjamin Franklin - 1840 - 572 páginas
...conveying letters not very regular, a . year's silence between friends must needs give uneasiness. Our new Constitution is .now established, and has an appearance...continues much as it has been for some time, except that I grow thinner and weaker, so that I cannot expect to hold out much longer. My respects to your good... | |
| Benjamin Franklin - 1904 - 510 páginas
...conveying letters not very regular, a year's silence between friends must needs give uneasiness. Our new Constitution is now established, and has an appearance...continues much as it has been for some time, except that I grow thinner and weaker, so that I cannot expect to hold out much longer. My respects to your good... | |
| American Philosophical Society - 1912 - 682 páginas
...Philadelphia. 2« Writing from Philadelphia, November 13, 1789, to Jean Baptiste Le Roy, Franklin says : " Our new Constitution is now established, and has an appearance...can be said to be certain, except death and taxes." PROC. AMER. PHIL. SOC., LI. 2O7 L, PRINTED JAN. 2O, 1913. plan is not working so smoothly now as in... | |
| American Philosophical Society - 1912 - 702 páginas
...Philadelphia. " Writing from Philadelphia, November 13, 1789, to Jean Baptiste Le Roy, Franklin says : " Our new Constitution is now established, and has an appearance...can be said to be certain, except death and taxes." PROC. AMER. PHIL. SOC., LI. 2O^ L, PRINTED JAN. 2O, 1913. plan is not working so smoothly now as in... | |
| Russell L. Caplan - 1988 - 265 páginas
...ratification after a prior rejection, 60 although this conclusion is not uncontroversial. 61 Timeliness promises permanency; but in this world nothing can be said to be certain, except death and taxes," In theory an application could remain effective, that is, could be aggregated toward a convention call,... | |
| Claude-Anne Lopez - 1990 - 436 páginas
...can hardly be heard among those tumults. Finally, in an outburst of national pride, he quipped: "Our new Constitution is now established, and has an appearance...nothing can be said to be certain, except death and taxes!"10 To be sure, few people, even among the French, had the vaguest inkling of the violence of... | |
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