The Antislavery ArgumentWilliam H. Pease, Jane H. Pease Bobbs-Merrill, 1965 - 492 страница |
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Страница 55
... race that opened them - a race unsuited to the climate in which they are found - who can doubt that the transplantation of the negro from our temperate zone to that hot climate , that infuses immense vigor into all the animal life as ...
... race that opened them - a race unsuited to the climate in which they are found - who can doubt that the transplantation of the negro from our temperate zone to that hot climate , that infuses immense vigor into all the animal life as ...
Страница 283
... race or color in the establishment of Common Schools . Any such discrimination by the Laws would be unconstitu- tional and void . But the Legislature has been too just and gen- erous , too mindful of the Bill of Rights , to establish ...
... race or color in the establishment of Common Schools . Any such discrimination by the Laws would be unconstitu- tional and void . But the Legislature has been too just and gen- erous , too mindful of the Bill of Rights , to establish ...
Страница 313
... race of savages , strong chiefly in their intense and selfish acquisitiveness , to whom our Southern brethren are fond of comparing themselves ) looked upon their Saxon serfs as mere cattle , and indeed reduced them as nearly as might ...
... race of savages , strong chiefly in their intense and selfish acquisitiveness , to whom our Southern brethren are fond of comparing themselves ) looked upon their Saxon serfs as mere cattle , and indeed reduced them as nearly as might ...
Садржај
Introduction | xxiii |
Chronology | lxxxv |
Selected Bibliography | xci |
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abolition of slavery abolitionists admitted African American Anti-Slavery Society American Colonization Society anti antislavery antislavery crusade argument become Birney Boston brethren Carolina cause Christian church citizens civil claim clause colonization colored common condition Congress Constitution Convention Court crime Declaration degraded doctrine duty enslaved equal evil feel Frederick Douglass Free Soil Free Soil Party freedom friends Fugitive Slave Garrisonians Gerrit Smith heart human immediate emancipation James Forten justice labor land legislation Lewis Tappan Liberty Party Maria Weston Chapman Massachusetts master means ment millions mind moral nation nature never non-slaveholders North northern object oppressed ourselves persons petition political action prejudice present principle question race reform religious sentiment servants Seward slave trade slaveholders South southern spirit thing tion true truth Union United vote Whig whole William Lloyd Garrison wrong York