Refine Search

Newspaper

Morning Chronicle

Countries

Place

London, London, England

Access Type

143

Type

143

Public Tags

More details

Morning Chronicle

THE CONQUERORS OF THE NEW WORLD, AND THEIR BONDSMEN

... developmlent of the most t consptcuotls form of modern slavery, Iby trac- i ing ''the priicipal events that led to the subjcctionI of the Indianls of the New World, and e to the introduction of negro slavery in America and a the West Indics. Justly conceiviig ...

WARLIKE STORES FOR THE SPANIARDS

... Company, 'tis true, Have clos'd their hearts and purses too, And will no't send their gold, to free A suffering land from slavery; Nay, they exult, and clap their hands, And talk with rapture of the bands, That tyranny for man prepares, And quaff their ...

ABOLITION of NEGRO APPRENTICESHIP

... called on to perform [hear, hear r]. His tellow-citizens had acted properly in losing no opportu- nity for the abolition of slavery. The legislature had paid 0,000,000 for the emancipation of slavers; bht, from the want of proper arrangements, thie wisliae ...

TO THE SULIOTS

... from his merciless hand: Remember that day when ye rush on the foe, With your brethren of Greece to lay tyranny low. When slavery settled around And Greece wept in chains and disgrace, Then the tyrant looked to your mountains and found No slave of the ...

DRURY-LANE THEATRE

... to Paulit:a, and dooms the i slavery. Dmne io bas a pick-axe thrust on him, atr. furnishbd with a spade ; tae y both resent the ostrage,' making efforts to regain their liberty, are conipellcA . 3 to their gallng slavery. The next sceue, which rop'aI ...

DON PEDRO AND DON MI

... and quarrels between the King and Queen, na- turally produced a baneful effect on the morals of the children; whilst negro slavery, and all its odious ramifica- tions, tended to create an undue notion of their own supe- riority, and opened a door to the ...

LITERATURE

... present day; aec Impartial Viev of Slavery aund Free- labour Systeens ; Statistics of Mine Island, and Bioqra- ,t Piical Motices of the Principal Families. 2 vols. Ia rSaunders and Otley, 1844. : d An impartial view of slavery and the free-labour systems 11 ...

THE MIRROR OF FASHION

... 13th Octoher. An article on the effects of the abolition of slavery at the Cape tf Good Hope appaars in the Sooth African Advertiser . uf which we estract t part :-' The question of 6 Slavery or no Olaverv' being nouw d isorIssed, the colonIsts are called ...

THE VOICE OF THE TIME

... world! Over lind, over sea, it hath come, The serf that was yesterday bought, To-day his defiance hath hurl'd, No more in his slavery dumb; And to-morrow will break from the fetters that bind, And lift a bold arm for the rights of maukind. Hark to the voice ...

RECOLLECTIONS OF A FRENCHMAN FROM. 1789 TO 1822

... forget-can I forget? Can I forget him when lie trod Our rights into the dust-and laid, Like some usurping demon-god, All slavery's burden on our head. Then freedom fled alarmed-and woe And shame within our dwellings met- Can time e'er raze that memory ...

THE MIRROR OF FASHION

... Lord Holland, and Lord John Russell. The Council broke up shoitly before four o'clock. A nunerous Deputation of the Anti-Slavery Society, consisting of nearly three hundred Noblemen and Gentlemen, waited on Mr. tecretary S auley yesterday. The Deputation ...

THE WESTERN WORLD

... with warning than suggestive of security, but d broadly avows, on more than one occasion, his ap- y prehension that the slavery question, in the new i- form which it is assuming in consequence of the LI recent territorial acquisitions, renders the permanent ...