The New-England Magazine, Band 2Joseph Tinker Buckingham, Edwin Buckingham, Samuel Gridley Howe, John Osborne Sargent, Park Benjamin J. T. and E. Buckingham, 1832 |
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Seite 9
... present one as impartially as possible . Those who defend the rationality of the doctrine of supernatural appearances , seem to rely upon the following arguments , viz . 1st . That the universal consent of mankind has been given to this ...
... present one as impartially as possible . Those who defend the rationality of the doctrine of supernatural appearances , seem to rely upon the following arguments , viz . 1st . That the universal consent of mankind has been given to this ...
Seite 19
... present condition may answer the question . To depopulate a country , the emigration must be greater than the increase . To get entirely rid of the black population , we must therefore ex- port more than the increase . Let us suppose a ...
... present condition may answer the question . To depopulate a country , the emigration must be greater than the increase . To get entirely rid of the black population , we must therefore ex- port more than the increase . Let us suppose a ...
Seite 20
... present generation , are not , indeed , answerable for the introduction of slavery ; but , if any safe means to remove the curse should offer , and we do not avail our- selves of it , we shall stand with our fathers in the relation of ...
... present generation , are not , indeed , answerable for the introduction of slavery ; but , if any safe means to remove the curse should offer , and we do not avail our- selves of it , we shall stand with our fathers in the relation of ...
Seite 21
... present gen- eration of slave holders need fear no material diminution of their im- portance . The negroes are laborers now ; they would then be nothing more . The two parties would still be in the relative situations of master and ...
... present gen- eration of slave holders need fear no material diminution of their im- portance . The negroes are laborers now ; they would then be nothing more . The two parties would still be in the relative situations of master and ...
Seite 25
... present . " " It may be so , " said she , " but he always hangs up his fiddle when he comes home . " The same remark may be made of Feeling . Men often hang it up when they come home , and growl at their wives and storm at their ...
... present . " " It may be so , " said she , " but he always hangs up his fiddle when he comes home . " The same remark may be made of Feeling . Men often hang it up when they come home , and growl at their wives and storm at their ...
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