Prose,Abraham Small. William Brown, printer, 1824 |
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Seite 10
... slave- trade by a solemn treaty of Christian potentates, the revival of the Holy Inquisition, and its concomitant plagues in Spain, the reluctant and hollow submission of a profligate soldiery to a family of princes whom they hated and ...
... slave- trade by a solemn treaty of Christian potentates, the revival of the Holy Inquisition, and its concomitant plagues in Spain, the reluctant and hollow submission of a profligate soldiery to a family of princes whom they hated and ...
Seite 64
... slave-trade in this country. The definitive treaty, at that time concluded, contained the following article : " His most Christian Majesty, concurring without reserve in the The Voyage of the Blind.
... slave-trade in this country. The definitive treaty, at that time concluded, contained the following article : " His most Christian Majesty, concurring without reserve in the The Voyage of the Blind.
Seite 65
... slave-trade, so that the said trade shall cease universally as it shall cease definitively, under any circumstances, on the part of the French government, in the course of five years ; and that during the said period no slave-merchant ...
... slave-trade, so that the said trade shall cease universally as it shall cease definitively, under any circumstances, on the part of the French government, in the course of five years ; and that during the said period no slave-merchant ...
Seite 66
... slave-trade ; for to commit the slave-trade is to commit fraud, violence, perjury, sacrilege, robbery, murder, treason, and every sin that is involved with, or incidental to the traffic in the bones and muscles of living men. As a ...
... slave-trade ; for to commit the slave-trade is to commit fraud, violence, perjury, sacrilege, robbery, murder, treason, and every sin that is involved with, or incidental to the traffic in the bones and muscles of living men. As a ...
Seite 67
... slave-trade there, than that cabinet had to revive the slave- trade in our own settlements, by a mere order in council : while, on the other hand, France had no more right to renew the horrid traffic where it had been annihilated, than ...
... slave-trade there, than that cabinet had to revive the slave- trade in our own settlements, by a mere order in council : while, on the other hand, France had no more right to renew the horrid traffic where it had been annihilated, than ...
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
Africa age of reason amidst angels appeared Babylon beautiful beneath blind body called Cape Town Castle Hill character Christian church church-yard colony crew darkness dead death degra dream Driffield earth eternity everlasting face Falsgrave fear feel gentleman George George Collier glen glory grew ground Guadaloupe Guy Mannering hand happened Harrogate hath head heard heart heaven High Harrogate Holy Inquisition honour hope Hottentots hour human hundred imagination inhabitants Kloof knew kraal labour ladies last day latter light lived look Lord lordship Market Weighton Matlock mind moon morning mountains multitude Negroes neighbours never night ocean passed peace poor reader recollected rest Rodeur Scarborough seemed seen side slave-trade slaves sleep soon soul South Africa spirit stand strangers thing thor thought thousand tide tion truth ture turned vessel voice walked walls wilderness words