Úplné zobrazení záznamu

Toto je statický export z katalogu ze dne 28.05.2026. Zobrazit aktuální podobu v katalogu.

Bibliografická citace

.
0 (hodnocen0 x )
(2) Půjčeno:2x 
BK
1st ed.
New York : Library of America, c2001
xix, 1108 s.

ISBN 1-931082-04-9 (váz.)
The Library of America ; 129
Obsahuje autorovu chronologii, poznámky, rejstřík
Hamilton, Alexander, 1757-1804 - dílo - výbory
000120294
The West Indies, the Revolution, and the Confederation, 1769-1786 // To Edward Stevens, November 11, 1769 // aMy Ambition Is Prevalent”...3 // To Nicholas Cruger, February 24, 1772 // Counting-House Business ...4 // To The Royal Danish American Gazette, September 6, 1772 // Account of a Hurricane...6 // A Full Vindication of the Measures of the Congress, December 15,1774 ...10 // To John Jay, November 26, 1775 // The Danger of Trusting in Virtue...43 // To Gouverneur Morris, May 19, 1777 The New York Constitution ...46 // To George Clinton, February 13, 1778 // The Trouble with Congress...48 // To Elias Boudinot, July 5, 1778 // The Battle of Monmouth...51 // To John Jay, March 14, 1779 // Enlisting Slaves as Soldiers...56 // To John Laurens, c. April 1779 // Hope for a Wife...58 // To William Gordon, September 5, 1779 An Insult to Honor...61 // To John I aurens, January 8, 1780 // aI Am Not Fit for This Terrestreal Country”...65 // To Elizabeth Schuyler, August 1780 // aExamine Well Tour Heart”...66 // To James Duane, September 3, 1780 // “The Defects of Our Present System”...70 // To Elizabeth Schuyler, September 3, 1780 // Opinions Regarding the Sexes...87 // To Elizabeth Schuyler, September 25, 1780 // The Plight of Mrs. Arnold ...89 // To Elizabeth Schuyler, October 2, 1780 // The Pate of Major André...9i // To Margarita Schuyler, January 21,1781 // Advice About Marriage ...92 // To Philip Schuyler, February 18, 1781 // A Break with Washington ...93 // To James McHenry, February 18, 1781 // Washington Will Repent His Ill-Humour...97 // The Continentalist No. I, July 12,1781...98 // The Continentalist No. HI, August 9,1781 ...101 // The Continentalist No. IV, August 30,1781 ...106 // The Continentalist No. VI, July 4,1782 ...? // To Richard Kidder Meade, August 27,1782 // The Birth of a Son ...118 //
Remarks in Congress on Raising Funds, January 27,1783 ...120 // Remarks in Congress on Collecting Funds, January 28,1783 121 // To George Washington, February 13, 1783 // The Prospect of a Mutiny...121 // To George Washington, March 17» 1783 // “Contending for a Shadow”...123 // A Letter from Phocion to the Considerate Citizens of // New-York on the Politics of the Day, January 1784 ...127 // To James Hamilton, June 22, 178s // aI Feel All the Sentiment of a Brother” ...140 // Address of the Annapolis Convention, September 14,1786 ...142 // Framing and Ratifying the Constitution, 1787-1789 // Plan of Government, c. June 18,1787...I4-9 // Speech in the Constitutional Convention on a Plan of Government, June 18,1787...W // CONTENTS // xiii // To George Washington, July 3,1787 “The Critical Opportunity” // Conjectures About the New Constitution, c. late September 1787 // The Federalist No. 1, October 27,1787 // The Federalist No. 6, November 14,1787 // The Federalist No. 7, November 17,1787 . // The Federalist No. 8, November 20,1787 // The Federalist No. 9, November 21,1787 // The Federalist No. 11, November 24,1787 // The Federalist No. 12, November 27,1787 // The Federalist No. 13, November 28,1787 // The Federalist No. 15, December 1,1787 . // The Federalist No. 16, December 4,1787 // The Federalist No. 17, December 5,1787 // The Federalist No. 21, December 12,1787 // The Federalist No. 22, December 14,1787 // The Federalist No. 23, December 18,1787 // The Federalist No. 24, December 19,1787 // The Federalist No. 25, December 21,1787 // The Federalist No. 26, December 22,1787 // The Federalist No. 27, December 25,1787 // The Federalist No. 28, December 26,1787 // The Federalist No. 29, January 9,1788 // The Federalist No. 30, December 28,1787 // The Federalist No. 31, January 1,1788 // The Federalist No. 32, January 2,1788 //
The Federalist No. 33, January 2,1788 // The Federalist No. 34, January 5,1788 // The Federalist No. 35, January 5,1788 // The Federalist No. 36, January 8,1788 // The Federalist No. 59, February 22,1788...330 // The Federalist N0. 60, February 23,1788 ...335 // The Federalist No. 61, February 26, 1788 ...341 // The Federalist No. 65, March 7, 1788 345 // The Federalist No. 66, March 8, 1788 ...351 // The Federalist No. 67, March n, 1788...357 // The Federalist No. 68, March 12, 1788...362 // The Federalist No. 69, March 14, 1788 366 // The Federalist No. 70, March 15, 1788...374 // The Federalist No. 71, March 18, 1788...383 // The Federalist No. 72, March 19, 1788...388 // The Federalist No. 73, March 21, 1788...394 // The Federalist No. 74, March 25, 1788...400 // The Federalist No. 75, March 26, 1788...403 // The Federalist No. 76, April 1, 1788 ...408 // The Federalist No. 77, April 2, 1788 ...413 // To James Madison, May 19, 1788 // Coordinating a Campaign ...418 // The Federalist No. 78, May 28,1788...420 // The Federalist No. 79, May 28, 1788...428 // The Federalist No. 80, May 28, 1788...431 // The Federalist No. 81, May 28, 1788...438 // The Federalist No. 82, May 28, 1788...448 // The Federalist No. 83, May 28,1788...452 // The Federalist No. 84, May 28, 1788...467 // The Federalist No. 8$, May 28, 1788...478 // To James Madison, June 8, 1788 // Fears of Civil War...485 // Speech in the New York Ratifying Convention on // Representation, June 21,1788 487 // Speech in the New York Ratifying Convention on // Interests and Corruption, June 21,1788...496 // Speech in the New York Ratifying Convention on // the Distribution of Powers, June 27,1788...502 // To George Washington, September 1788 // Convincing Washington To Serve ...511 // To James Wilson, January 25, 1789 // Withholding Votes from Adams ...513 To George Washington, May 5, 1789 //
Presidential Etiquette ...515 // Secretary of the Treasury, 1789-1795 To Lafayette, October 6, 1789 // “I Hazard Much” ...521 // Memorandum by George Beckwith on a Conversation // with Hamilton, October 1789...523 // To Henry Lee, December 1, 1789 // “Suspicion Is Ever Eagle Eyed”...530 // Report on the Public Credit, January 9,1790 ...531 // Report on a National Bank, December 13,1790...575 // Opinion on the Constitutionality of a National Bank, February 23,1791...613 // Report on the Subject of Manufactures, December 5,1791 ...647 // To Philip A. Hamilton, December 5, 1791 // aA Promise Must Never Be Broken”...735 // To Edward Carrington, May 26, 1792 // “A Faction Decidedly Hostile to Me” ...736 // To George Washington, July 30, 1792 // The Necessity of Reelection...751 // An American No. I, August 4,1792 ...755 // To George Washington, August 18, 1792 // Political and Personal Defense...760 // To John Adams, September 9, 1792 // Reprimanding Adams...788 // To George Washington, September 9, 1792 // Responding to a Plea for Peace...789 // Amicus, September 11,1792...792 // To an Unknown Correspondent, September 26, 1792 // An Embryo-C&sar ...794 // Draft of a Defense of the Neutrality Proclamation, c. May 1793...795 // Pacificus No. I, June 29,1793...801 // To Andrew G. Fraunccs, October 1, 1793 // “Contemptible As You Are”...810 // To Angelica Hamilton, c. November 1793 // Advice to a Daughter ...810 // To George Washington, April 14, 1794 // Crisis with Britain...811 // To George Washington, August 2, 1794 // The Whiskey Rebellion ...823 // Tully No. I, August 23,1794 ...827 // Tully No. HI, August 28,1794 ...830 // To Angelica Church, October 23, 1794 // “Wicked Insurgents of the West”...832 // To Angelica Church, December 8, 1794 // “A Politician, and Good for Nothing” ...833 // Memorandum on the French Revolution, 1794...833 //
To George Washington, February 3, 1795 // Resigning from Office ...836 // Federalist Leader and Attorney, 1795-1804 // To Rufus King, February 21,1795 // A Threat to the Public Credit ...841 // To Robert Troup, April 13, 1795 // “Public Fools”...842 // The Defence No. I, July 22,1795...844 // Memorandum on the Design for a Seal of the // United States, c. May 1796...850 // CONTENTS // XVII // To George Washington, July 30, 1796 // A Draft of the Farewell Address...851 // To William Loughton Smith, April 10, 1797 // Crisis with France ...869 // To William Hamilton, May 2, 1797 // Introduction to an Uncle ...879 // The “Reynolds Pamphlet,” August 25,1797 ...883 // To George Washington, May 19, 1798 // An Appeal to Washington ...911 // To Elizabeth Hamilton, November 1798 // aMy Good Genius”...912 // To Theodore Sedgwick, February 2, 1799 // The Problem of Virginia...913 // To James McHenry, March 18,1799 Displaying Strength aLike a Hercules” ...915 // Memorandum on Measures for Strengthening the Government, c. 1799...915 // To Josiah Ogden Hofiman, November 6, 1799 // “The Force of theLaws Must Be Tried”...920 // To Charles Cotesworth Pinckney, December 22, 1799 // The Death of Washington ...922 // To Martha Washington, January 12, 1800 // “So Heart-Rending an Affliction” ...922 // To John Jay, May 7, 1800 // An Electoral Stratagem ...923 // To Theodore Sedgwick, May 10, 1800 // Withdrawmg Support from Adams...925 // To Charles Carroll of Carrollton, July 1, 1800 // Supporting Pinckney...926 // To John Adams, August 1, 1800 // Response to an Accusation...928 // To Oliver Wolcott Jr., August 3, 1800 // “I Am in a Very Belligerent Humour” ...929 // To William Jackson, August 26, 1800 // “The Most Humiliating Criticism”...930 // xviii CONTENTS // Rules for Philip Hamilton, 1800 ...932 // To John Adams, October 1,1800 //
"A Base Wicked and Cruel Calumny" ...932 // Letter from Alexander Hamilton, Concerning the Public Conduct and Character of John Adams, Esq-President of the United States, October 24,1800 ...934 // To Gouverneur Morris, December 26, 1800 Jefferson Over Burr...972 // To John Rutledge Jr., January 4, 1801 // Anxiety About the Election...972 // To James A. Bayard, January 16, 1801 // Burr Has aNo Fixed Theory” ...977 // Proposal for the New York Legislature for Amending // the Constitution, January 1802 ...982 // Remarks on the Repeal of the Judiciary Act, February 11,1802...983 // To Gouverneur Morris, February 29, 1802 // “Mine Is an Odd Destiny”...985 // To Benjamin Rush, March 29, 1802 // The Death of Philip Hamilton...987 // To James A. Bayard, April 1802 // The Christian Constitutional Society ...987 // To Rufus King, June 3, 1802 // aA Most Visionary Theory Presides”...99i // To Charles Cotesworth Pinckney, December 29, 1802 // “Refuge of a Disappointed Politician” ...994 // To Elizabeth Hamilton, March 17, 1803 // “A World Full of Evil”...995 // Purchase of Louisiana, July 5,1803...996 // To Timothy Pickering, September 16, 1803 // Explaining a Plan of Government...1002 // Speech to a Federalist Meeting in Albany, February 10,1804 1004 // Propositions on the Law of Libel, February 15,1804 ...1006 // From Aaron Burr, June iS, 1804 // Origins of a Dispute ...1008 // To Aaron Burr, June 20, 1804 // Declining to Avow or Disavow...1010 // From Aaron Burr, June 21, 1804 // New Reasons for a Definite Reply...1012 // To Aaron Burr, June 22,1804 // “Expressions Indecorous and Improper”...1013 // From Aaron Burr, June 22, 1804 // “The Course I Am About to Pursue”...1014 // Response to a Letter from Wüliam P. Van Ness, June 28,1804...1015 // Statement Regarding Financial Situation, July 1,1804...1016 // To Elizabeth Hamilton, July 4,1804 //
“Fly to the Bosom of Tour God”...1019 // Statement Regarding the Duel with Burr, c. July 10,1804...1019 // To Theodore Sedgwick, July 10, 1804 // “Our Real Disease; Which Is Democracy”...1022 // To Elizabeth Hamilton, July 10, 1804 // An Obligation Owed...1023 // Appendix: Statements on the Hamilton-Burr Duel // Joint Statement by William P. Van Ness and // Nathaniel Pendleton, July 17,1804 ...1027 // Statement by Nathaniel Pendleton, July 19,1804 ...1028 // Statement by William P. Van Ness, July 21,1804...1030 // Chronology ...1035 // Note on the Texts...1052 // Notes...1056 // Index ...1090

Zvolte formát: Standardní formát Katalogizační záznam Zkrácený záznam S textovými návěštími S kódy polí MARC