| Orville T. Bright, James Baldwin - Readers - 1888 - 436 pages
...heard. "All things," said John Adams, who was afterwards the second president of the United States — "all things were conducted with great order, decency, and perfect submission to government." After the work was done, the town became as still and calm as if it had been a holy day... | |
| Readers - 1888 - 432 pages
...heard. " All things," said John Adams, who was afterwards the second president of the United States — "all things were conducted with great order, decency, and perfect submission to government." After the work was done, the town became as still and calm as if it had been a holy day... | |
| George Bancroft - United States - 1896 - 522 pages
...possession of the three tea-ships, and, in about three hours, three hundred and forty chests of tea, being the whole quantity that had been imported, were emptied...with great order, decency, and perfect submission to government." The people who looked on were so still that the noiae of breaking open the tea-chests... | |
| William Wilfred Birdsall, Rufus Matthew Jones - American literature - 1897 - 602 pages
...possession of the three tea-ships, and in about three hours, three hundred and forty chests of tea — being the whole quantity that had been imported — were...with great order, decency, and perfect submission to government." The people around, as they looked on, were so still that the noise of breaking open the... | |
| Readers - 1899 - 312 pages
...heard. "All things," said John Adams, who became afterward the second President of the United States, "all things were conducted with great order, decency, and perfect submission to government." After the work was done, the town became as still and calm as if it had been a holy day... | |
| Readers - 1899 - 312 pages
...heard. "All things," said John Adams, who became afterward the second President of the United States, "all things were conducted with great order, decency, and perfect submission to government." After the work was done, the town became as still and calm as if it had been a holy day... | |
| Jenny H. Stickney - Readers - 1900 - 400 pages
...heard. " All things," said John Adams, who became afterward the second President of the United States, " all things were conducted with great order, decency, and perfect submission to government." After the work was done the town became as still and calm as if it had been a holy day... | |
| Sydney George Fisher - History - 1902 - 492 pages
...claimed particular credit for not having injured any other property on the ships, and declared that " all things were conducted with great order, decency, and perfect submission to government." Our ancestors had a fine sense of humor. From the point of view of Samuel Adams, I suppose... | |
| D.C. Heath and Company - Readers - 1903 - 362 pages
...three hundred and forty chests of tea — all that could be found — into the waters of the bay. 79 The people around, as they looked on, were so still that the noise of breaking open the tea chests was plainly heard. " All things," said John Adams, who became afterward... | |
| D.C. Heath and Company - Readers - 1903 - 362 pages
...heard. " All things," said John Adams, who became afterward the second President of the United States, " all things were conducted with great order, decency, and perfect submission to government." After the work was done, the town became as still and calm as if it had been a holy day... | |
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