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Aberdeenshire, Scotland

Access Type

98

Type

97
1

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LITERATURE

... natives, and disgraceful to this country, was the system of ehforciug obedience by- corporal punishments. This last badge of slavery,.we understand, 'still hangs over the peor Cingadce-lthe pooreit of whom are sub- jected to public burdens equal to those ...

POETRY

... that groW In forests green; arouud thy kneo t1boro rose A race, victorious o'er their co-ntry's fos; Whoso becks the yoko of slavery never bere, Whoso hands were reddened in fierce tyrants' gore; Who never froml the sheath the bright sword drow- Wbho never ...

THE GREAT EXHIBITION—LOCAL CONTRIBUTIONS

... intellectual improvement. Mr A. Marshall,' Skel- mena, then addressed the meeting on the evils of Slavery, in a very impressive speech, showing clearly that slavery could not he tolerated on common sense principles, although our Christianity were lost sight ...

LITERATURE

... privatlien: of acce sassing sheta us; accticec' siscit reap : H-ece is at ptcilscsthc'phisc-clcickiccg of blood- P stain ed slavery. Of millions, dealt. wnith eas lciglcia they wec's tcs ecc hlip heasts lust icerici : boaughti: sorld : scour1ged : saiccic ...

LITERATURE

... was to ahea exhibit the iniquity of Slavery by concentratin) ginl one fecus laid` Lsparsr- from tltiukiiig minds upon this subjeet-to unite the isl- the c- fllience of pubhic instructors in a protest against Slavery, and, Oins onoerally, to increase pubich ...

LITERATURE

... . LITERAT.URE. SLAVERY IN AMEiIICA, Toyss - B~~~~~~~~~Iisto The Key to Uncle TOMn's Gelbss yrugentudg the orifindal fanth Knoxr anid cdoseusete uejie tehded the StoiV is founsded, tcetehesr WtA chars correterative Statements, iveWLfrtig the truth of the: ...

LITERATURE

... saeridan their dsnscrillinrgwa habits,, and by their own acts, in their own councils, to abolish their rpernicious usages. Slavery was prohibited; Infanticide, which it had CO been found so difficult to 'check elseswhere, was comrpletely put an We' end ...

LITERATURE

... referred to, and is a spirited defeneo of Mrs Stowe's book S as agailnst pro-slavery reviewers, showing, as the authoress her- I self has doele in the Key, that thecPictures of slavery in Uncle | Tom are more than warranted by reality. tl The Giamblter's ...

LITERATURE AND ART

... WILESNS, a hook which, at any rate, shews that Uncle Teom's Cabin did net exhibit, by o any aseans, the whole of the horrors of slavery-y The Cardinal 0 ain historical novel, not unworthy of Walter Sott ; Alice Weni- of weorth, which is brilliant, clover, and ...

LITERATURE AND ART

... bare-headed in the open air. ANTI-SLAVERY.-Mrs Stowe, in a letter to an anti- lavery Bsociety lately established in Glasgow, states that the recent de- rmonstrations in Great Britain have, on the whole, done good to the anti-slavery cause, the state of which ...

LITERATURE

... asto: of the third (capital X 1280), assd 61100 serfs trading with authorisation of their masters ? It should be noted that slavery is much milder' in WOver Turkey than serfdom in Russia, antid it is daily getting tarer: the slove net mcarket at Constantinople ...

LITERATURE

... political - character of Russia. Ab prince, said the lady, don't yon ssee tiat we aro the only two nations which maintain slavery - d there is the sympathy between us. Fact. d Tnr ETTRICK SHEPHIEcRD ON TicK DouVOUERux.- ' Shepherd: I never fan' ony ...