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John L. Brown (search for this): chapter 6
s Scotland was just then greatly exercised by the news that a South Carolina judge had passed Lib. 14.34, 51, 62, 66, 67. sentence of death on a Northern man, John L. Brown, for aiding the escape of a female slave. The incident, except among abolitionists, See Whittier's poem and prefatory note on this incident on p. 89, vol. but vigorously supported by the clergy; one, a town meeting, at Edinburgh, summoned by the Magistrates and Lib. 14.67. Council. What more natural than to couple Brown's Lib. 14.77. case with the action of the Free Church in accepting contributions from American slaveholders—and South Carolinian in particular? The British prout at any rate, and then nail the rap to the counter (Lib. 14: 102).—was heard and felt in South John Belton O'Neall; Carolina; and, whether or not it was heeded, Brown's Lib. 14.109. sentence was commuted to whipping. The Free Church was less sensitive, and its collecting agents, already landed in America, were guided neither b
at religious Scotland was just then greatly exercised by the news that a South Carolina judge had passed Lib. 14.34, 51, 62, 66, 67. sentence of death on a Northern man, John L. Brown, for aiding the escape of a female slave. The incident, except among abolitionists, See Whittier's poem and prefatory note on this incident on p. 89, vol. 3, of his Writings, ed. 1888. created no excitement in this Lib. 14.67. country. In England it was pathetically commented on in the House of Lords by Brougham and by the Lord Lib. 14.67, 87. Chief-Justice Denman, who spoke, as William Ashurst Under the nom de guerre of Edward Search. 87. wrote to the Liberator, in the name of all the Judges of England on this horrible iniquity. Lib. 14.87. O'Connell thundered against it before the British and Foreign Anti-Slavery Lib. 14.102. Society. A memorial to the nonentity known as the Churches of Christ in South Carolina, as representing those of other provinces, confederated in the United States o
W. L. Garrison (search for this): chapter 6
al brotherhood. They are true men, vouched Mr. Garrison, who will stand by us to the last—men who hAt Henry Vincent's home at Stoke Newington, Mr. Garrison spent a memorable day in company with Wrighwas in its own behalf and in furtherance of Mr. Garrison's mission, a meeting being held on the justin the highest degree. A few samples of Mr. Garrison's remarks will show alike his tact and his after their last meeting at Playford Hall, Mr. Garrison, with Douglass for his companion, betook A to a daughter, whom they have named Caroline Garrison Bishop. This is an indication of their perso A few days after the Exeter Hall meeting, Mr. Garrison Ante, p. 166. bade good-bye to London, andng the effects of the incipient famine, and Mr. Garrison was melted to tears by the frequent sight o overtaxed system. On December 11, 1846, Mr. Garrison wrote to Geo. W. Benson (Ms.): The Garrisonscription of the Fair as much as I did. I saw Garrison the other day, and he seemed to be especially[31 more...]
Charles Waterton (search for this): chapter 6
Old Sinai burns unquenchably Upon his lips; he well might be a Hot-blazing soul from fierce Judaea, Habakkuk, Ezra, or Hosea. His words burn as with iron searers, And nightmare-like he mounts his hearers, Spurring them like avenging Fate, or As Waterton his alligator. Chas. Waterton. Hard by, as calm as summer even, Smiles the reviled and pelted Stephen, S. S. Foster. The unappeasable Boanerges To all the Churches and the Clergies, The grim savant who, to complete His own peculiar cabinet, Chas. Waterton. Hard by, as calm as summer even, Smiles the reviled and pelted Stephen, S. S. Foster. The unappeasable Boanerges To all the Churches and the Clergies, The grim savant who, to complete His own peculiar cabinet, Contrived to label with his kicks One from the followers of Hicks; Elias Hicks. Who studied mineralogy Not with soft book upon the knee, But learned the properties of stones By contact sharp of flesh and bones, And made the experimentum crucis With his own body's vital juices: A man with caoutchouc endurance, A perfect gem for life insurance, A kind of maddened John the Baptist, To whom the harshest word comes aptest, Who, struck by stone or brick ill-starred, Hurls back an epithet as hard, W
d in Boston, having just rounded the fourth month of his Absence. We pass over the receptions given to him by the Lib. 16.191, 194, 202. colored people at Belknap-Street Church; in Salem; in Faneuil Hall. Rather let us look in, with a poet's eye, on the reunited abolitionists at the Anti-Slavery Bazaar, opened in the same hall on December 22. Never was more humor combined with a finer discernment of character and more exquisite portraiture than in these lines, written as a Letter from Boston to the editor of the Lib. 17.6, and Ms. Pennsylvania Freeman, by James Russell Lowell: Dear M., Jas. Miller McKim. By way of saving time, The letter is post-marked Dec. 27, 1846. I'll do this letter up in rhyme, Whose slim stream through four pages flows Ere one is packed with tight-screwed prose, Threading the tube of an epistle Smooth as a child's breath through a whistle. The great attraction now of all Is the ‘Bazaar’ at Faneuil Hall, Where swarm the Anti-Slavery folks As thick, d
Maria Chapman (search for this): chapter 6
erect geographical or national barriers in opposition to these natural, essential, and sacred rights’ (M. S. July 30, 1847, to Mrs. Louisa Loring). There was Maria Chapman, too, With her swift eyes of clear steel-blue, The coiled — up mainspring of the Fair, Originating everywhere The expansive force without a sound That whirled ir as much as I did. I saw Garrison the other day, and he seemed to be especially pleased with it, and the account of Stephen Foster delighted him. Of that and Maria Chapman he spoke most particularly. Miller made one error, and only one, in his copy, and that was sweet instead of swift eyes. Mrs. Chapman's eyes are not sweet, buMrs. Chapman's eyes are not sweet, but swift expresses exactly their rapid, comprehensive glance.’ The author of the Biglow Papers had already begun that inimitable satire of the national crime against Mexico, marked, so far, by Taylor's military successes at Lib. 16.82, 167. Matamoras and Monterey. The demoralization which war immediately produces as a mere sta<
Wilberforce (search for this): chapter 6
en for nearly a year confined to his bedroom—Never mind wearying me—consider what a glorious cause we have (Ms.). See the resolution offered by Edmund Quincy in Faneuil Hall on Mr. Garrison's return, touching these coincidences of Clarkson and Wilberforce (Lib. 16: 202). It is a fact for a poet to celebrate, wrote S. J. May to his friend on his return, that you should have been in England to attend the burial of Clarkson, as you were of his co-worker Wilberforce. Lib. 16.194. But in this partiWilberforce. Lib. 16.194. But in this particular only the parallel fails, as Mr. Garrison was denied the privilege of following Clarkson's remains to the grave. On October 1, in beautiful and affecting Glasgow Argus, Oct. 15, 1846. terms, at a public meeting in Glasgow, he took notice of his venerated predecessor's Repose at length, firm Friend of human kind. A few days after their last meeting at Playford Hall, Mr. Garrison, with Douglass for his companion, betook Aug. 24-28, 1846. himself to Bristol and Exeter. At the for
John Saunders (search for this): chapter 6
anufacture and sell intoxicating drinks. Mr. Garrison lost no time in seeking introductions to Lib. 16.146. the conductors of the leading press of the metropolis. He had a very gratifying interview with Douglas Jerrold, who promised to aid the anti-slavery cause in his Weekly Newspaper, and presently reprinted several articles from the Liberator. He was well received by Dickens's locum tenens on the Daily News, the chief being at that time on the Continent. He opened relations with John Saunders, of the People's Journal, and renewed his friendship with William and Mary Howitt, now connected with this Ante, 2.377. periodical. On Sept. 10, 1846, Mr. Garrison wrote to his wife (Ms.): Mary Howitt has completed her autobiography of me for the People's Journal. The solecism was felicitous, for the sketch which appeared in No. 37 of that magazine, accompanied by a villanous portrait on wood (Lib. 18: 22), was based on data furnished by him, and is fairly to be called autobiographi
ir, Originating everywhere The expansive force without a sound That whirled a hundred wheels around, Herself meanwhile as calm and still As the bare crown of Prospect Hill; Somerville, Mass. A noble woman, brave and apt, Cumaea's sybil not more rapt, Who might, with those fair tresses shorn, The Maid of Orleans' casque have worn, Herself the Joan of our Ark, For every shaft a shining mark. And there, too, was Eliza Follen, Who scatters fruit-creating pollen Where'er a blossom she can find Hardy enough for Truth's north wind, Each several point of all her face Tremblingly bright with the inward grace, As if all motion gave it light Like phosphorescent seas at night. There jokes our Edmund, plainly son E. Quincy. Of him who bearded Jefferson,— A non-resistant by conviction, But with a bump in contradiction, So that whene'er it gets a chance His pen delights to play the lance, And—you may doubt it or believe it— Full at the head of Joshua Leavitt The very calumet he'd launch, And <
rica. The gag was accordingly applied, though the Convention unanimously agreed that it was a very naughty thing to manufacture and sell intoxicating drinks. Mr. Garrison lost no time in seeking introductions to Lib. 16.146. the conductors of the leading press of the metropolis. He had a very gratifying interview with Douglas Jerrold, who promised to aid the anti-slavery cause in his Weekly Newspaper, and presently reprinted several articles from the Liberator. He was well received by Dickens's locum tenens on the Daily News, the chief being at that time on the Continent. He opened relations with John Saunders, of the People's Journal, and renewed his friendship with William and Mary Howitt, now connected with this Ante, 2.377. periodical. On Sept. 10, 1846, Mr. Garrison wrote to his wife (Ms.): Mary Howitt has completed her autobiography of me for the People's Journal. The solecism was felicitous, for the sketch which appeared in No. 37 of that magazine, accompanied by a
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