SECESSION AND SLAVERY

... Y 11 De ivilate(l sol0 DUI0I11g Our prisoner, your N ] SECESSION AND SLAVERY. iug (FronM Punch.) ?ar. -Secede, ye Southern States, secede, of No better Jplan could be, ex - If you of Niggers would be freed, of To set your Niggera free. de- Runaway s1laves ...

LECTURE ON SLAVERY BY MISS REMOND

... of the state of society throughout America; showed how slavery was interwoven with the inters ts of every class; and pointed out the almost utter hopelessness of effecting the abolition of slavery by any homse influence, otherthan by the fearul crisis ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... tells us that he links together on his title-page Slavery and Secession as cause and effect. Some people, he says, Say that slavery has bad nothing to do with originating the present difficulties, but that it is the desire of the South to be free from the ...

LITERATURE

... ial account of id the rise and progress of slavery in the United States. Spain introduced slavery into America, but at the door of Great Britain lies the sin of its perpetuation. The trade was so lucrative that, under the patronage of royalty and commerce ...

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 ...

NOTES ON NEW BOOKS

... in North America- By H. Reid.-Only that Mr. Reid's book embraces some account of the constitution of Congress, and of the Slavery question, it would be by no means either amusing or instructive, Most of his observa- tions on American manners and customs ...

THE QUARTETTE CONCERTS

... .Ah4 ic wag r't to inttifNQ writ Ii slavery in tle slave states3 bui not to allow it lo extend ; whilst the Democratic puity on the other hand' would extend slavery. The senhll rn man believed honestly that slavery was right ; and it certiiinly loas a ...

LITERATURE

... require in this I country to enable us to form a just estimate of t slavery in its influence upon society generally. The author does not indulge in exaggerated denuncia- e tions of slavery, neither does he gloss over its t hideous features ; he simply recounts ...

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 ORLEANIST PRINCES AND THE AMERICAN ARMY

... which they serve ! The cause, no one can doubt, is good. Although they do not proclaim very loudly as yet, the abolition of slavery is at the bottom of the quarrel which arms the volunteers of tho North. is a war in which humanity itself is concerned. Besides ...

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 ...

LITERATURE

... preaching sermons, and publishing pamphlets G against slavery, but offering no scheme Nx for its extinction. This is scarcely correct, many as plans have been offered for the abolition of slavery, til but they have all been rejected by the slaveholders ...