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An Oration, Prepared and Published at the Request of the Military of the City of Albany

Delivered, February 22., 1820

Delivered, February 22., 1820 David Osborn. till his departure to a better world;
abler pens have exhausted the subject. These have done justice to his memory.
A LEE, a Lynn, a Jackson, an AMEs, and others, forming a splendid galaxy of
eloquence and talents, have erected monuments of glory, which time itself can
neither injure nor destroy. These have marked him in the field and in the cabinet,
and shewn him without a rival in either. If more be wanted, the banks of the
Monongahela ...

An Essay on the Influence of the External Corn Trade Upon the Production and Distribution of National Wealth

Containing an Inquiry Into the General Principles of that Important Branch of Traffic; an Examination of the Exceptions to which These Prinicples are Liable; and a Comparative Statement of the Effects which Restrictions on Importation and Free Intercourse, are Respectively Calculated to Produce Upon Subsistence, Agriculture, Commerce and Revenue

The Demon Expelled; Or, the Influence of Satan and the Power of Christ Displayed in the Extraordinary Affliction and Gracious Relief of [John Evans], a Boy about Ten Years of Age, at Plymouth-Dock

This display of Satan's presence and malice may serve to contradict the lies of
Atheists, who deny his existence while they are full of his influence; and to open
the eyes of drowsy christians who are crying peace and safety, while the powers
of ...

An essay on the different nature of accent and quantity

with their use and application in the English, Latin, and Greek languages: containing remarks on the metre of the English; on the origin and aeolism of the Roman; on the general history of the Greek; with an account of its ancient tones, and a defense of their present accentual marks. With some additions from the papers of Dr. Taylor and Mr. Markland. To which is subjoined, the Greek elegiac poem of M. Musurus, addressed to Leo X, with a Latin version and notes

However, it is no improbable conjecture to suppose, that a corrupt manner of
pronouncing some words in the Greek language was occasioned by Alexander's
expedition into Asia. His army might have learned to accent some words
according ...