Refine Search

Countries

Counties

Midlothian, Scotland

Access Type

70

Type

70

Public Tags

SECESSION AND SLAVERY

... SECESSION AND SLAVERY. The following song by Whittier, the American poet, has just appeared in the New York journals. Its publication shows the immense progrers which the cause of Abolition haq made within the last twelve months:- B5IN' YngTE BUild lST ...

PICTURES OF SLAVERY IN THE SOUTHERN STATES

... PICTURES.OF SLAVERY IN, THE ,: > SOUTHERN STATES.' . A MILD CLIMATE. no Speak~ing of the cliniate of the dojin try, 'I was no informed, that a ?? of tlhe folk's wtont bare- trz foot all winiter, though they htid'snoiw Much of the time four 'or' ii'e lniehes ...

Literary Notices

... the pro- slavery shareholders deserve at once to be reduced to a parallel with the basest criminals that lie fettered within the cells of our public prisons.-P. 158. Shall we pat the bloodhounds of' slavery ? Shall we fee the curs of slavery ? Shall ...

Literary Notices

... most instances of any of wilful intention thereby to bolster up slavery in in any of its forms, but merely of want of due re- flection, an easy adoption of the popular notion e that slavery was a Jewish institution, notwithstand- A., ing that it is susceptible ...

Original Poetry

... n, Leligion, language, reft by tyrant hand Enough for her that slavery's pollution Should not extend itself through freedom's land. Yet bastard patliots cheer'd her rebel ban, And slavery's cause have miscalled liberty; And when the German Duchies took ...

Fittrartl If-'I--dic

... views of S-ithern institution s very much modified-tbat Vf is to Fly, having set out wvith a healthy British I ,ntijlrath to slavery, this antipathy has been Be ovel.,, le, and they have been brought to se look 111i u the ''peculiar institution as a use ...

Court and Fashion

... by every flood of pro-slavery articles and speeches l which reaches them whenever a vessel man- ages lo ran the blockade ; but it is now time that higher principles and aims should make themselves heard, and that the anti- slavery party in America should ...

Literary Notices

... was impelled mainly by slavery, and was primarily dependlenlt en slavery, is no argument in justifica-l tion of the v ice. The utmost which* it proves is, f that the economlical p1-ogress of nationss has been1 faster with slavery than it would otherwise ...

THE FINE ARTS

... their peculiarities, therefore, we merely mention that they are there. In noticing in our last the sketches illustrative of Slavery, by J. Noel Paton, ?? now on view in Hill's Gallery, we omitted to state that the series, photographed by Mr Thomas Annan ...

THE FALL OF ADAM

... men ! la, ha, the traifle O ! - . Adam brdggiu' each U.P., Malill feed sic chids as godly Lee 2 Else wvear bondms' and slaverie-l Ha, Iha, the traitor 0 1 Adama laughs now at DiMsentj Ha, ha, the traitor 0 ! Thintiks the tax as just as rent! I1a ...

THE POETRY OF THE LASH

... argument might be' pushed a step far-. ther :-What £iterature has the South, dise- tinctively such, produced 9 In. truth slavery. is fatal to mental effort-in regard to the slave. owner no less than to the slave himself. To conclude, On which side is' ...

PRESIDENT LINCOLN AT BALTIMORE. F A I R

... shorter timne. Very few at that time thought the institution of slavery would be very much affected by it; but these expectations were not realised, and here we are-(laughter)-and slavery has been somewhat affected-(great- laughter). So true is it that ...