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Countries

England

Place

Newcastle-upon-Tyne, Northumberland, England

Access Type

182

Type

182

Public Tags

FEMALE FASHIONS

... passed. Adjourned. lsDiA'Y, APRIL 30. Lord De Dunstanyille presented two peti. tions, praying for the gradual abolition of slavery, but the names of the places from whence they eame could not be heard below the ?? on the table. The Duke of Montrose brought ...

LITERATURE

... the sickening expe- rience of their own. In America they saw nothing but free. dom and happiness-in F'ratice nothing but slavery and misery. Was it possible that such a state of things could endure long? -that the yoke which harl wyorn into the raw could ...

LITERATURE

... lutiidi it-Iv, bhenuse iore Muisire anid ii.1ertah!e feel lgS, ?? trout the love of freedow ais,! the ijnluelne it rcligion. Slavery is itself, ait conlisitereil is shout regardi to 'the s o' ell'tges ind gereeptible progess by witch its abolitini is I rt-uared ...

LITERATURE

... '.otwithstsjiding all' such abridgerments. had I G I I.s eI s the Inbour of eeporting tbroughbut a session is worse than slavery. The eatabllshnoen of each paper~svorkslin a sort Df revolving series, or in tile man; llerrof a crcloid.' -if .A wa lot -at ...

LITERATURE

... added I'm' the author :_ I is coniformity with these principles, I would rieconmnetnd that an early day be lixed, on which Slavery shall ctuvre Mi7 evet!ry part of the British Emuiipire; antd that the exposuri e of arty oman, wooman, or chihil to sale, ...

LITERATURE

... P. ?? Agiew has been elected t ,irev twr if thie East I ndia Cornmpanyi i i the roam of the late Nl' I.sillie-'[lie anti-slavery tdelegates assembilet in townti have ileelaterI the milnisterial pglu as proipoutted, to be neither sa'id 1iltt' satisfactory ...

LITERATURE

... addressed its revelations in an espe- cial manner to the poor, destroyed this ruinous distinction. Universally, the horrors of slavery gradually yielded to the rising influence of Christianity. The religious houses were the first which emancipated their vassals; ...

LITERATURE

... on naval aiftairs are so f(ntd of'assumitmg. Soume of time bpilliOIIS ?? h1tO the - wlcrk, particularly those t11 ilegro slavery-t(l, as Cyriigle- wsould have us believe, netgro happhimiessstlid enj(iynmellt- aire tibjectiouiahle: but ags w hbole, we ...

LITERATURE

... female ?? Thompson, Esq., the strenuons oppo. nent of 'oloiaiavery,6ailed.n Saturday, for New York, to assist in abolishing slavery in the United States. ...

LITERATURE

... that thete may be a spiritual state of boitdage, is not less becomitig thain a patriotic ellort to preserve them from bodily slavery, provided the means tlken, wtlth that end ill viewi, be such as alre not cdlculatetl to i woundl *he fcelings of those wioan ...

POETRY

... we rsaw er r ft breaking; We Called our oegro shter-treel- tint tront our pileoaot sluoitbor tanking. We hod her slill ih slave-ry; Attd Perans, booith, oodav s-ourfige stilt' Avait bIer. In lotr tyrants wilt. Oalr Nautinns wealth. sir freely gNveO. IIa ...

POETRY

... ! the cirellog mandaten fly And prostrate all onr pleadings lie, White base conneidint hirelings try To crush is down to slavery. Arlve ye trlends of jpotte !-tllet! Tyramdcc arbemes of hlooi defeat, And ot their cruel purponc cheat The vaunting soo f ...