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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 ...

LITERATURE

... merchant, the planter, ci k the slave owner, or the- zealous emancipationist. I went, he ti t: says, neither as a friend of slavery, nor as an emancipationist; I A - journeyed neither as a Protectionist, nor as a Ministerialist, nor as ie Free Trader. Of ...

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 ...

LITERATURE

... robe tzhe-re, lot tihat ile soil belonged to the aboi ginaI Indians. This is all -veyt'. iftinir. Bar his obserrain -on slavery IC tile Uo1ted Sierce, area equally distingaished by -their humanitt- ?? good( sos Indl chore is an ominous -meaning- inthis ...

FASHIONABLE MOVEMENTS

... Mlr Crowe, &c- The resolutions submntted to the maetitz declared, that b while the meieting1 was gratified en know that slavery had been tj abolished by the great Majority of' civilized nations, it deeply t lamented th~e continuance of that sy-rem in ...

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

... to this arbitrary ansd most ot icntol of' English ici~giss, that we revert whets we trace the tlitbolitioti ofolotsuiestic Slavery in Etiglund. Tile KLing granted a d1 3illansutnissioms to two of his sluaves stud their families ; for which WIt ,lie aissigned ...

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 ...

DINNER TO MR. MONCREIFF, M.P., AT MUSSELBURGH

... power which had been truly called the of their hberties. In 1806 they abo- lished the slave-trade, and at a iater date they slavery itselfi—so that as it was said that the sum never set en the British dominions, it might alko now be said that the son never ...

Caledonian Mercury

... you are not going to a happy district—you are going toa quarter of the globe, where you will be subjected to someting like slavery without any respite. The sentence of the Court is that you be transported beyond seas for the period of fourteen years. Tue ...

FINE ARTS

... the noii-poetical age in in which modein Italians drag, oii a life of frivolity, mental dlark- wIV ucaes, sand political slavery Th lile iturme is a group of Italiaii ?? -3innt'u iiid fieults under the shadowi of an old ri rimie-covereil arch, which ...

NEW MUSIC

... musicians, and artists seem to have mistaken the desire, elicited by the perusal of a tale, to express their feelings against slavery, for an inspiration. Wesuspect that the divine afflatus of genius does not descend upon men or wo- men either w hell they ...