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Yarmouth Gazette and North Norfolk Constitutionalist

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Great Yarmouth, Norfolk, England

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Yarmouth Gazette and North Norfolk Constitutionalist

are born free and equal ; and though until the last civil war slavery existed in the States as

... are born free and equal ; and though until the last civil war slavery existed in the States as a Republican * institution,” freedom and equality are now recognised throughout “Uncle Sam’s dominions as being by law established. Theoretically, perhaps ...

A MODERN CRUSADER

... Pontifical household, another as missionary to Syria, and then by turn Bishop in France; Archbishop in A::erh, and bitter foe of slavery everywhere. He was alike at home with a fashionable congregation in the French capital or with a Kabyle audience in Algeria ...

OUR MAGNIFICENT FLEET

... together. But all this time slavery had been actively encouraged both by English and Dutch, and it was when England awoke to a sense of the cruelty, injustice, and inhumanity of it all, and decided to take the xoko of slavery off the black men's neck, that ...

THE FUTURE GREAT BRITAIN

... than submit to a condition of things which their leaders foresaw must reswt in the abolition of slavery. We all know the resalt. The South was conquered—slavery was abolished. Many of the Southern States now regard the ““ Union with about as much affection ...

IMPERIAL PARLIAMENT

... vote £5OO for slave trade services. The CHANCELLOR of the Excuzquer said the Government would use every exertion to fl?t& slavery at Zanzibar and elsewhere. discussion took place fiw«fi to Cyprus, and a resolution was declsring that po system of taxation ...

THE GORSEDD

... to the Anti-Slavery y, when he became the :.'3“' of bitter persecution. But, undannted by poverty suffering, \‘}hmkr continued to glorify ‘the cause of freedom hy his powerful song and prose. ~ In 1847 ho edited tM‘-l.‘mr&q a fut anti-slavery organ, in ...

WILLINOLT o TSWILLINGLY,

... Yarmouth.) Mr. Balfour, again, had said that the people who had Sunday closing in Scotland were not suffering under any yoke of slavery, and it could not be regarded as an unjustifiable interference with the liberty of the subject. (Cheers.) From whom did this ...

in his work would become & true artist, so that * art madeby the pooJ!o for the people,” would become,

... a dread of the * coming slavery of Socialism ; it was also opposed to the fallacy of levelling-down by depression of the eminent, 8o a 8 to bring about equality on the part of the proletariat, for fear of the *modern slavery” of capital. When the modern ...

EARLY CLOSING. To the Editor

... coins honthonin&iv:duhvbo cannot a better occupation i the Mnhonnvhmthodny'l'om lo%hnbeenfinhlud. e shameful forms of ‘¢ white slavery” excivlinod somntry t-days call for togllatie “ civi country to-day, c or ve interference. 'l'h:x’gh not so bad here as ...

SWEEF THE ENGLISH OUT OF AFRICA,

... Dr:‘-&-!‘ pany, Lincoln. In this short sketch you have a summary of the, history of the whole business. The abolition ef | slavery is, as you see, the root of the question. The Boers, no don{n. would like to be siave drivers today just as they were a bundred ...