Massachusetts Quarterly Review, 3 tomasCoolidge & Wiley, 1849 J.R. Lowell's review of Thoreau's A Week on the Concord and Merrimack Rivers is in v. 3, p. 40-51 (Dec. 1849). |
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3 psl.
... slaves , and from necessity have daily intercourse with them . " To one who thinks that slave - holding is an affair of very small concern , if of any concern at all , these are quite natural sen- timents - exactly such as it might be ...
... slaves , and from necessity have daily intercourse with them . " To one who thinks that slave - holding is an affair of very small concern , if of any concern at all , these are quite natural sen- timents - exactly such as it might be ...
4 psl.
... slaves . But does the Senator really think so ? As well might he contend that a man must be a practiser of every sin forbidden in the deca- logue , of every vice with which society is afflicted , before he can have knowledge enough to ...
... slaves . But does the Senator really think so ? As well might he contend that a man must be a practiser of every sin forbidden in the deca- logue , of every vice with which society is afflicted , before he can have knowledge enough to ...
5 psl.
... slaves , scenes of cruelty , in which they are the sufferers , have but little abiding influence on the slaveholder . We are ready to admit that he may think they are cruel , unfeeling , sanguinary , and that he would not be an actor in ...
... slaves , scenes of cruelty , in which they are the sufferers , have but little abiding influence on the slaveholder . We are ready to admit that he may think they are cruel , unfeeling , sanguinary , and that he would not be an actor in ...
7 psl.
... slaves , in any particular district , that can read ; or that they prefer continuous labor to the improvement of the facilities that God has given them : -rather let us be told that they can go to school and improve their faculties as ...
... slaves , in any particular district , that can read ; or that they prefer continuous labor to the improvement of the facilities that God has given them : -rather let us be told that they can go to school and improve their faculties as ...
8 psl.
... slaves . He , no doubt , views the slaves as , in some measure , made for their present condition ; thinks they ought to behave well , be reconciled to their enslavement , and in his sense , be treated well . We think it altogether ...
... slaves . He , no doubt , views the slaves as , in some measure , made for their present condition ; thinks they ought to behave well , be reconciled to their enslavement , and in his sense , be treated well . We think it altogether ...
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