They have a womanish attachment to France and a womanish resentment against Great Britain. They would draw us into the closest embrace of the former, and involve us in all the consequences of her politics ; and they would risk the peace of the country... Alexander Hamilton: An Essay on American Union - Page 313by Frederick Scott Oliver - 1912 - 502 pagesFull view - About this book
| Ralph Ketcham - 1971 - 816 pages
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| Stephen Miller - 1983 - 176 pages
...Madison's party foolish and potentially subversive, confiding to a friend that Madison and Jefferson "have a womanish attachment to France and a womanish resentment against Great Britain."16 By the close of 1793, he and other Federalists were thinking that Madison's and Jefferson's... | |
| Peter S. Onuf - 1991 - 476 pages
...corporations to the enumerated powers of Congress. He also gradually revealed, in Hamilton's opinion, a "womanish attachment to France and a womanish resentment against Great Britain," which could produce an open war with the latter in six months' time. Finally, he joined with Thomas... | |
| Carol Berkin - 1995 - 582 pages
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| Robert Rutland - 1995 - 312 pages
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