| William Ellery Channing - 1848 - 456 str.
...bring alike on slave and master. The following letter fully expresses the state of his feelings : — " There is one object here which always depresses me....when forced to substitute the will of another for his own^ceases to be a moral agent ; his title to the name of man is extinguished, he becomes a mere machine... | |
| Robert Aspland - 1848 - 788 str.
...where and for ever bring alike on slave and master." He thus expressed his feelings in a letter :* " There is one object here which always depresses me....such a distinction, or established such a relation. * » * Should you desire it, I will give you some idea of the situation and character of the Negroes... | |
| William Ware - 1850 - 472 str.
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| William Ellery Channing - 1850 - 532 str.
...bring alike on slave and master. The following letter fully expresses the state of his feelings: — " There is one object here which always depresses me....ever settling in Virginia. Language cannot express my detesta* Works, Vol. II., p. 231. tion of it. Master and slave! Nature never made such a distinction,... | |
| William Ellery Channing - 1852 - 106 str.
...under the Randolphs it assumed its mildest form. 'There is one subject," he writes at this period, ' which always depresses me. It is slavery. This alone...Virginia. Language cannot express my detestation of it.' The state of religion in Richmond, and some of his own trials and struggles, he thus makes known :... | |
| National cyclopaedia - 1879 - 624 str.
...against which he laboured so ton? and earnestly in his subsequent life. ' This alone,' he wrote home, 'would prevent me from ever settling in Virginia,...and slave ! Nature never made such a distinction, or such a relation.' He published an important work on the subject in 1835, which had the effect of rousing... | |
| William Ellery Channing, American Unitarian Association - 1880 - 748 str.
...the state of his feelings : — " There is one object here which always depresses me. It is sfavery. This alone would prevent me from ever settling in...distinction, or established such a relation. Man, when foreed to substitute the will of another for his own, ceases to be a moral agent ; his title to the... | |
| Barrett Wendell - 1900 - 598 str.
...thence a letter which strikingly expresses the feeling excited by slavery in earnest Unitarians : — " There is one object here which always depresses me....substitute the will of another for his own, ceases to be v a moral agent : his title to the name of man is extinguished, he becomes a mere machine in the hands... | |
| John White Chadwick - 1903 - 502 str.
...of the Kandolphs from home. Hence germinal convictions which flowered and fruited in due time : — There is one object here which always depresses me. It is slavery. Language cannot express my detestation of it. Master and slave ! Nature never made such a distinction... | |
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