Refine Search

Newspaper

Daily News (London)

Countries

Access Type

336

Type

336

Public Tags

More details

Daily News (London)

SLAVERY IN CUBA

... rection. The most striking portions of Captain Town- shend's account of Cuba are, however, those which describe what he saw of slavery. Wishing to see the slaves actually at work, he visited the sugar plantation of Tolosa, near the town of Marianec, ten miles ...

SLAVERY IN BEAZIL.—NO. 4

... in 1852 with an address to the Emperor on slave trade a and slavery; and their testimony is at this moment par- ticularly valuable, when the committee of the British and f Foreign Anti-Slavery Society are conveying in court-like IS phrases different sentiments ...

LITERATURE

... Old Testament distinctly recognises slavery as a Hebrew institution. It is also true that the New Testament speaks of slavery in several passages, and does not condemn it. But before we draw the conclusion that slavery is a divine institution, established ...

LITERATURE

... institution of slavery by violent means, have unintentionally been prolonging it; but time will re 1c pair this mistake, by rendering the possession of slaves an a expetwive mode of cultivation-that is, if cotton can be cultivated without it. Slavery eiisted ...

LITERATURE

... of slavery in moulding the opinions of our people, as well as in shaping the destinies of l our country. I Mr. Greeley pursues the only philosophical or rational course in dealing with the history of I slavery as the history of secession. Slavery has ...

LITERATURE

... to nm abolish slavery throughout the Dutch colonies. Onr{ the first day of last J ulythlat great object was effected for, by all act of the Dutch legislature, I duly ratitled by the king, it was decreed that, from 01 that (late, slavery sbould cease on ...

LITERATURE

... disadvanitages of liberty, of alL mention of negro slavery ! A stranger to A.me- 1 rica and its history miight read the wvhole of the 530 octavo puge vithout discovering that sach a thing I as negro slavery existed, or that it existed in i 30uth Carolina ...

ENTERTAINMENT TO MR. GEORGE THOMPSON, M.P

... theoe Swere persons wrho had eatosed. him at his ectoun. (Cheers:) After a graphic deielepwin of the horrors of American slavery, adri its dcmokatsing inlieence on the' slaroowners themselves, te hon. gentleman observed that christianitvy itself w as ...

MUSIC

... Henry Russell, the eminent singer, gave whathe called a new vocal and pictorial entertain- ment, descriptive of negro slavery. It consisted of a sort of moving panorama, or seriesofpictures,which passed across rtho backof the stage; each of them, as ...

LITERATURE

... are too long fur ex- tract. The Professor is an opponent to slavery on economical as well as moral grounds, but he consi- ders that emancipation has been retarded by the vio- lent anti-slavery agitation which has been raised. The ' dollar and cent. views ...

SUNDAY IN ST. JAME'S PARK

... Wharf-road, City-road, N., London, Jan. 27. THE REV. A. RALEIGH ON SLAVERY.-The Rev. A. Raleigh, of Hare-court Chapel, Canonbury, preached a special sermon on the subject of slavery on Stit- day evening. The rev. gentleman chose for his text Heb. xiii ...