قراءة كتاب The Anti-Slavery Examiner, Omnibus

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The Anti-Slavery Examiner, Omnibus

The Anti-Slavery Examiner, Omnibus

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
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href="@public@vhost@g@gutenberg@html@files@11275@[email protected]#AE_Ex1" class="ref pginternal" tag="{http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml}a">No. 10. EMANCIPATION In The WEST INDIES, IN 1838.

  • THE CHATTEL PRINCIPLE THE ABHORRENCE OF JESUS CHRIST AND THE APOSTLES; OR NO REFUGE FOR AMERICAN SLAVERY IN THE NEW TESTAMENT. 1839.
  • No. 10. American Slavery As It Is: Testimony of a Thousand Witnesses.
  • No. 10. Speech of Hon. Thomas Morris, of Ohio, in Reply to the Speech of the Hon. Henry Clay.
  • No. 11. The Constitution A Pro-Slavery Compact Or Selections From the Madison Papers, &c.
  • No. 11. The Constitution A Pro-Slavery Compact Or Selections From the Madison Papers, &c. Second Edition, Enlarged.
  • No. 12. Chattel Principle The Abhorrence of Jesus Christ and the Apostles; Or No Refuge for American Slavery in the New Testament.
  • On the Condition of the Free People of Color in the United States.
  • No. 13. Can Abolitionists Vote or Take Office Under the United States Constitution?
  • Address to the Friends of Constitutional Liberty, on the Violation by the United States House of Representatives of the Right of Petition at the Executive Committee of the American Anti-Slavery Society.
  • THE ANTI-SLAVERY EXAMINER


    VOL. I. AUGUST, 1836. NO. 1.

    TO THE
    PEOPLE OF THE UNITED STATES;
    OR, TO SUCH AMERICANS AS VALUE THEIR RIGHTS, AND
    DARE TO MAINTAIN THEM.

    FELLOW COUNTRYMEN!

    A crisis has arrived, in which rights the most important which civil society can acknowledge, and which have been acknowledged by our Constitution and laws, in terms the most explicit which language can afford, are set at nought by men, whom your favor has invested with a brief authority. By what standard is your liberty of conscience, of speech, and of the press, now measured? Is it by those glorious charters you have inherited from your fathers, and which your present rulers have called Heaven to witness, they would preserve inviolate? Alas! another standard has been devised, and if we would know what rights are conceded to us by our own servants, we must consult the COMPACT by which the South engages on certain conditions to give its trade and votes to Northern men. All rights not allowed by this compact, we now hold by sufferance, and our Governors and Legislatures avow their readiness to deprive us of them, whenever in their opinion, legislation on the subject shall be "necessary

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