SLAVERY IN THE ARMY,
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... IWILITARY SLAVERY. TO TlE ?? foP Bo XNOrLI) a NZwPAPBr. 8Sx;-1 cai not refrain from expressing my slaoera thanks In allowiug space for my last In your highly es- teemed paper. My princippl crjot of writing this time Is to endeavour to oarreol a slight ...
... new plan they have gone to the m5 extreme of practically re-establishing, in fact, ln Mexico, bl the odisus inetitution of slavery. The eD called law of the em ?? f Austria goes accompaniedbyaregulation G signed bv the same Maximilian, of which I also enclose ...
... as the supporter of a pro-slavery administration, and in England as the Minister of a pro. slavery Government. It is said also that an edition of his History of the United States, carefully expurgated of some anti-slavery utterances of the founders ...
... belief that England had suddenly turned pro-slavery. But now, sir, the conviction forces titself upon me that England-the England at least which is - heard to speak and seen to act in the negro question-is pro-slavery. I write these words with a heaviness of ...
... anti-slavery conviction of the free States until it the itriumphed over then in politico aiid defeated them in ?? battle mih itk magnanimity for weakness. But En ;though these thoughtful Northern men had foretold that Da )the uasurpations of slavery would ...
... Temporalities Act, and the aboli. v tion of slavery, these should certainly stand side by side, and a most laughable pair they would be. I say, Arch. f bishop, what do you think I'd have done about this slavery business, if I'd had my own way? rd have ...
... possessed before the war. It seems simple and straightforward to say the war was for two things-slavery as the end, and State sovereignty as the means. Slavery is abolished, and events have proved that the central authority is stronger than the authority ...
... between freedom and slavery; it wss a struggle pr t between Christianity and all that wre hostile to slavery, mn, r and the spirit which would miake slavery perpetual. Chrms on tianity had founded a new empire in the Nie World, and hii slavery'came, upagainst ...
... Preoident then went en to speak of slavery and te negro. HIe had been brcught up, he said, under the very lshadow at the very institution of slavery. He had. boeghitsn. ?? Elaves, but still he 14d always been for abol'honag sla&very upon any basis which could ...