MR. NORRIS'S LETTER,' -
... run the °w on Government lines, we should have lees ■ahr k^De8t ...
... run the °w on Government lines, we should have lees ■ahr k^De8t ...
... beyond that data the tan has agreed that all such offsming call be free from bondale. If this promi. e kept it is obvious that slavery must becou e ra lually extinct, and in a manner which ,will be slow enough to prevent, east African ^^lety expeliencing any ...
... 1110•••• 3MIO, The following sentence from a lettter written by Livingstone a short time before his death, and whicl• refers to slavery, is inscribed on his tomb in Westminster bey : All I can add in my loneliness ' may Heaven's rich blessings come down o ...
... monastic orders were numerous, and that the frauds which thay practised, in order to keep the peopie in ignorance and mentat slavery, merited not only ex- posure, but punishment. Probably, too, the aggre- gate wealth of the clergy was exorbitant; but the ...
... historian of the first century of the Christian era, says the Germans would stake, their own persons, and the Ioer go into slavery,. Buffering themselves to be bound and sold for such a* supposed debt for which they received nothing' and. in later lines ...
... asw idea that Chriat introduced into human society. It has already given slavery its death blew, it was not any discovery om part of polllieal aeonoausta that destroyed slavery. It wan aiseovary that nvary slave emu and bretber. Then down went slavaty ...
... least a century and a hilt (the estimate of hie neighbours varying from 158 to 169 years); the negress Trim, who died in slavery on the plantation of a Tucuman physician, in her 175th year ; and the day-labourer, Thomas Parr, who attained the pretty well ...