Annual Report and Proceedings, 第 14-18 卷Massachusetts Anti-Slavery Society, 1846 |
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共有 80 个结果,这是第 1-5 个
第3页
... hope and encouragement , and there were others , whose black and baleful influences fell cold upon our hearts , and seemed to cast ominous conjecture upon the fate of our enterprise and of our country . It cannot be expected that in the ...
... hope and encouragement , and there were others , whose black and baleful influences fell cold upon our hearts , and seemed to cast ominous conjecture upon the fate of our enterprise and of our country . It cannot be expected that in the ...
第6页
... hope that the banns of this unhallowed marriage might yet be forbidden . There is good reason for believing that a strong reluctance existed on the part of the leading public men of Texas to descending from their position at the head of ...
... hope that the banns of this unhallowed marriage might yet be forbidden . There is good reason for believing that a strong reluctance existed on the part of the leading public men of Texas to descending from their position at the head of ...
第15页
... only measure by which they can effectually do either the one or the other . We need scarcely say , to this audience , that we mean , THE DISSOLUTION OF THE EXISTING UNION OF THESE STATES . In this alone lies the last hope of the Northern ...
... only measure by which they can effectually do either the one or the other . We need scarcely say , to this audience , that we mean , THE DISSOLUTION OF THE EXISTING UNION OF THESE STATES . In this alone lies the last hope of the Northern ...
第16页
... hope , rather than risk a collision with the chief consumer of their cotton , and tremble at the prospect of black regiments carrying a crusade for liberty , under the red - cross of St. George , into the heart of their plantations ...
... hope , rather than risk a collision with the chief consumer of their cotton , and tremble at the prospect of black regiments carrying a crusade for liberty , under the red - cross of St. George , into the heart of their plantations ...
第22页
... hope is there that an adequate spirit of resistance may be roused which shall end them all together . But black and lowering as the Southern skies still are , there are not wanting occasional gleams of light which are the harbingers of ...
... hope is there that an adequate spirit of resistance may be roused which shall end them all together . But black and lowering as the Southern skies still are , there are not wanting occasional gleams of light which are the harbingers of ...
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常见术语和短语
Abolition Abolitionism Abolitionists action addressed adjournment adopted agitation amendment American Anti-Slavery Society American Slavery Annual Meeting Anti believe Board Boston brethren British BUFFUM cause character Christian Church colored Committee Congress Constitution Convention crime declared Democratic Douglass duty earnest EDMUND QUINCY effect Emancipation enemies England excited existence faithful Faneuil Hall fidelity following resolution FRANCIS JACKSON Free Soil Party friends fugitive GARRISON Government hands heart held honor hope human interest JOHN justice labors Legislature liberty Massachusetts Massachusetts Anti-Slavery Society ment Messrs Mexico mind moral motion National never nomination North Northern Ohio OLIVER GARDNER opinion Parker Pillsbury persons political present President principles Pro-Slavery purpose question refused Report Republic Resolved SAMUEL Senate session Slave Power Slaveholding South Southern speech spirit subject of Slavery success sympathy territory tion Union United vote WENDELL PHILLIPS Whigs WILLIAM WILLIAM LLOYD GARRISON Wilmot Proviso zeal
热门引用章节
第5页 - That, as an express and fundamental condition to the acquisition of any territory from the Republic of Mexico by the United States, by virtue of any treaty...
第14页 - Nevertheless congress adopted his views without delay, and on the 13th declared that by an act of the republic of Mexico, a state of war existed between the two governments; it authorized the president to call for volunteers to any number, not exceeding 50,000, to serve for twelve months after arrival at the place of rendezvous, and placed at his disposal $10,000,000. The president immediately intimated to General Scott, the commander-in-chief...
第26页 - The right of property is before and higher than any Constitutional sanction; and the right of the owner of a slave to such slave and its increase is the same and as inviolable as the right of the owner of any property whatever.
第14页 - House dissenting) had declared that " by the act of the Republic of Mexico a state of war exists between that Government and the United States...
第60页 - Address from the People of Ireland to Their Countrymen and Countrywomen in America.
第15页 - We hesitate not to say that Annexation, effected by any act or proceeding of the Federal Government, or any of its departments, would be identical with, dissolution. It would be a .violation of our National compact, its objects, designs, and the great elementary principles which entered into its formation, of a character so deep and fundamental, and would be an attempt to eternize an institution and a power...
第68页 - If, however, any one should offer himself as a missionary, having slaves, and should insist on retaining them as his property, we could not appoint him. One thing is certain, we can never be a party to any arrangement which would imply approbation of slavery'.
第15页 - ... nature so unjust in themselves, so injurious to the interests and abhorrent to the feelings of the people of the free States, as, in our opinion, not only inevitably to result in a dissolution of the Union, but fully to justify it...
第65页 - ... Separation aforesaid, and based upon the Discipline of the Methodist Episcopal Church, comprehending the doctrines, and entire moral, ecclesiastical, and economical rules and regulations of said Discipline, except only in so far as verbal alterations may be necessary to a distinct organization, and to be known by the style and title of the Methodist Episcopal Church, South.
第15页 - We hold that there is not only ' no political necessity' for it, ' no advantages to be derived from it,' but that there is no constitutional power delegated to any department of the National Government to authorize it ; that no act of Congress, or treaty for annexation, can impose the least obligation upon the several States of this Union to submit to such an unwarrantable act, or to receive into their family and fraternity such misbegotten and illegitimate progeny. "We hesitate not to say that Annexation,...