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SLAVERY IN BEAZIL.—NO. 4

... in 1852 with an address to the Emperor on slave trade a and slavery; and their testimony is at this moment par- ticularly valuable, when the committee of the British and f Foreign Anti-Slavery Society are conveying in court-like IS phrases different sentiments ...

LITERATURE

... progress of slavery in the United States, a subject upou which people generally have need to be better informed. The author's speculations, penned before the present war began, as to the probable course of events there as bearing upon the slavery difficulty ...

LITERATURE

... The English as a nation are as much op- con posed to slavery as they have ever been, but it has oa taken some time to convince them that tile Ameri- was can war was, or must becomie, an anti-slavery war, Dity The Americans themselves tire beomnnrpdl converted ...

THE CRUISE OF THE SUMER AND THE ALABAMA

... of the war, Captain Semmesis at no pains to conceal his opinion. Re does not attempt to disguise the ob- vious fact that slavery is the sole fons et origo mali. We commend his candour upon this point to the notice of Southern advocates in this coun- ...

LITERATURE

... monument to his honour is a salutary lesson to the world. Theodore Parker was made of tough materials. His denunciations of slavery were not bitter pills-gilded to hide their bitterness. The advocate writes with a loaded pistol at his elbow. This is not ...

LITERATURE

... compact volume, illustrated by the clever and observant pencil of M. Eliza Edwards. SLAVERY. The Hon. C. s. Molrehead, of Kentucky, has written a pamphlet on Slavery, and President . Lincoln's Emancipation, the last sentence of which - gives the writer's ...

LITERATURE

... Tale of the Great Transition (Hurst and Blackett), is the title of a very powerful story illustrative of the abominations of slavery. The author, Epes Sargent, is evidently well acquainted with the subject on which he writes, and this Eng- lish edition of ...

LITERATURE

... child:' Brave, was-e-hearted southern soldiers Neaer the fatherless defiled I They toil us all this misery Will purge from slavery's stain I WWhen tyrants triumph, chains and bondage On the vanquished fail like rain. *This Voico of Childhood. By John de ...

LITERATURE

... the Society of Friends, will be held in I honour for the share they took in relieving Great j Britain from the reproach of slavery. HIis time, l I his labours, his wealth, were freely bestowed for the liberation of the West Indian slaves ; he visited p ...

LITERATURE

... I want to see the national govern. - ment divorced from slavery, and its influence put on the side of freedom. This seems to mo a possible practil hI work. Once accomplished the doom of slavery is sealed. h Its final extinction is certain, the regeneration ...

PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS

... war. Four years elapse, and we find the two coiirades messmates on board the Terrible, then about attacking that hot-bed of slavery, Algiers. They are made pri- soners by the AlIgerines, and condemned to death, but the executioner deputed to decapitate them ...

LITERATURE

... English- men, carried atvay by their southern sympathies, ared, endeavourinlg to bring themnselves to the conclucionl that slavery is the natural condition of. the negro, and that ho will never be fit for freedom. Let ULr. Vigne sp~eak:. Belier specimens ...