Anti-slavery Monthly Reporter, 2 tomasZachary Macaulay Bagster and Thoms, 1829 |
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13 psl.
... marriages as compared 2 5 155 35 14 18 No to 80 4 86 Average price of Slaves sold . 1821 to 1825 . £ . ― none none 4 none none none no return 209 none 12 From the above statistical details , a few plain inferences West Indian Statisties ...
... marriages as compared 2 5 155 35 14 18 No to 80 4 86 Average price of Slaves sold . 1821 to 1825 . £ . ― none none 4 none none none no return 209 none 12 From the above statistical details , a few plain inferences West Indian Statisties ...
14 psl.
... marriages in 18 years were 1004 ; and their population being about 290,000 , this amounts to about one annually among each 5000 slaves . For the division of these among the different parishes , see Reporter , No. 19. p . 268 . The ...
... marriages in 18 years were 1004 ; and their population being about 290,000 , this amounts to about one annually among each 5000 slaves . For the division of these among the different parishes , see Reporter , No. 19. p . 268 . The ...
17 psl.
... marriages of slaves in the different Colonies , and by the general absence of all legal sanctions to such marriages ; circumstances which incontestably establish the prevalent disregard of the colonial legislatures , and the colonial ...
... marriages of slaves in the different Colonies , and by the general absence of all legal sanctions to such marriages ; circumstances which incontestably establish the prevalent disregard of the colonial legislatures , and the colonial ...
20 psl.
... married in Barbadoes , has given some fresh cause of mortal offence to his parishioners . Accordingly , on the 21st day of April 1827 , a meeting of the Vestry , called by public ad- vertisement " to take into consideration the highly ...
... married in Barbadoes , has given some fresh cause of mortal offence to his parishioners . Accordingly , on the 21st day of April 1827 , a meeting of the Vestry , called by public ad- vertisement " to take into consideration the highly ...
27 psl.
... marriage of slaves they have introduced pro- visions which go far to render it of no avail ; and also that the law as to the slave's right of property is left in a very imperfect state . * Be- sides all this that important Clause of the ...
... marriage of slaves they have introduced pro- visions which go far to render it of no avail ; and also that the law as to the slave's right of property is left in a very imperfect state . * Be- sides all this that important Clause of the ...
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admitted adopted allowed Anti-Slavery Reporter appears Assembly Bahamas Barbadoes Berbice Bishop British Critic Christian church circumstances clause coartado colonists coloured complaint concubinage Court crime cruelty Demarara Dwarris effect enactment England estates evidence evil fact favour feel females flogged free labour give given Governor Grenada ground human Huskisson improvement India inflicted island Jamaica justice lashes legislation legislature Lord Bathurst Lord Seaford Lordship Majesty's Government manumission manumitted marriage master Mauritius means measures ment MONTHLY REPORTER negro object offence oppression Order in Council owner parish Parliament persons plantation planters present principle proceedings produce protection Protector provisions punishment question Ralph Woodford reform religious instruction respect Robert Farquhar Sabbath sanction shew slave code slave colonies slave population slave trade slavery Society Society's statement sugar Sunday markets testimony thing tion Trinidad Order West Indian West Indies whip whole
Populiarios ištraukos
438 psl. - And I sought for a man among them, that should make up the hedge, and stand in the gap before me for the land, that I should not destroy it: but I found none.
21 psl. - All things whatsoever ye would that men should do unto you, do ye even so unto them ; for this is the law and the prophets : Matt, vii, 12.
205 psl. - That through a determined and persevering, but, at the same time, judicious and temperate enforcement of such measures, this House looks forward to a progressive improvement in the character of the slave population, such as may prepare them for a participation in those civil rights and privileges which are enjoyed by other classes of his Majesty's subjects.
232 psl. - Which monarchs cannot grant, nor all the powers Of earth and hell confederate take away : A liberty, which persecution, fraud, Oppression, prisons have no power to bind; Which whoso tastes can be enslaved no more. 'Tis liberty of heart derived from Heaven, Bought with His blood, who gave it to mankind, And seal'd with the same token.
21 psl. - MASTERS, give unto your servants that which is just and equal ; knowing that ye also have a Master in heaven.
202 psl. - It is in the nature of things that they should be so. — Let then the British House of Commons do their part themselves ! — Let them not delegate the trust of doing it to those who cannot execute that trust fairly ! — Let the evil be remedied by an assembly of freemen, by the government of a free people, and not by the masters of slaves. Their laws can never reach, could never cure the evil.
202 psl. - NEVER CURE the EVIL. There is something in the nature of absolute authority, in the relation! between Master and Slave, which makes despotism in ALL cases, and under ALL circumstances, an incompetent and unsure executor, even of its own provisions in favour of the objects of its power.
178 psl. - I cannot too distinctly impress upon you that it is the settled purpose of His Majesty's government to sanction no colonial law, which needlessly infringes on the religious liberty of any class of His Majesty's subjects...
415 psl. - Servitude most laborious, their Punishments most severe. And thus many thousands of them spend their whole Days, one Generation after another, undergoing with reluctant Minds continual Toil in this World, and comforted with no Hopes of Reward in a better. For it is not to be expected that Masters, too commonly negligent of Christianity themselves, will take much Pains to teach it their slaves; whom even the better Part of them are in a great Measure habituated to consider, as they do their Cattle,...