The Debate on a Motion for the Abolition of the Slave-trade: In the House of Commons on Monday the Second of April, 1792W. Woodfall, 1792 - 178 Seiten |
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... myself compelled to do on former occafions ; for befides that I might well be content to leave the task of enforcing the propofition I shall bring forward , to the greater abilities and more powerful elo- quence of thofe by whom I have ...
... myself compelled to do on former occafions ; for befides that I might well be content to leave the task of enforcing the propofition I shall bring forward , to the greater abilities and more powerful elo- quence of thofe by whom I have ...
Seite 8
... myself the painful recital . I willingly pafs over the detail of all thofe circum- stances of degradation to which they are subjected , their being worked in the fields under the whip like cattle , instead of being treated like moral ...
... myself the painful recital . I willingly pafs over the detail of all thofe circum- stances of degradation to which they are subjected , their being worked in the fields under the whip like cattle , instead of being treated like moral ...
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... myself the right of doing fo , if it should be rendered necef- fary by any thing urged in the course of the debate . I felt it my duty to investigate the causes of the difturbances in quef- tion , and I do declare myself decidedly ...
... myself the right of doing fo , if it should be rendered necef- fary by any thing urged in the course of the debate . I felt it my duty to investigate the causes of the difturbances in quef- tion , and I do declare myself decidedly ...
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... myself to dwell so long on thefe confiderations , I now proceed to that part of the subject which indeed most interests my heart . LOOK TO THE Con- TINENT OF AFRICA , and there you will behold fuch a scene of horrors as no tongue can ...
... myself to dwell so long on thefe confiderations , I now proceed to that part of the subject which indeed most interests my heart . LOOK TO THE Con- TINENT OF AFRICA , and there you will behold fuch a scene of horrors as no tongue can ...
Seite 23
... myself with the habits of the Slave Trade . In the evening he called all the healthy part of his crew on deck , and ordered them to ftrip and blacken their bodies all over , putting a piece of cloth round their loins , that they might ...
... myself with the habits of the Slave Trade . In the evening he called all the healthy part of his crew on deck , and ordered them to ftrip and blacken their bodies all over , putting a piece of cloth round their loins , that they might ...
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
aboliſh Abolition afferted Africa African Slave Trade African Trade againſt alfo alſo anſwer argument becauſe Britain Britiſh cafe Captain caufe cauſe circumftances Colonies Committee confequence confider confiderable cruelty defire eſtabliſhed evil exift exiſtence faid fame fanction fecurity fettlers fhall fhew fhips fhould fituation flavery flaves fome ftate ftill fubject fuch fuffer fufficient fupply fure furniſhed fyftem happineſs himſelf Honourable Friend Houfe Houſe humanity importation increaſe inftance inſtead intereft itſelf Jamaica juftice king of Dahomey labour laft laſt lefs mafter meaſure miferable moft moſt muft muſt myſelf neceffary Negroes obfervation occafion opinion ourſelves Parliament perfons Planters poffible prefent principles propofition propoſed puniſhment purchaſe purpoſe queſtion reaſon refpectable reft regulations Right Honourable Gentleman ſay ſcene ſhall ſhip Sierra Leone Company Slave Trade ſome ſpeak ſtate ſuch ſyſtem thefe themſelves theſe thofe thoſe thouſand tion uſed Weft India Iſlands Weft Indies Weſt India wiſh
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 41 - Of law there can be no less acknowledged, than that her seat is the bosom of God, her voice the harmony of the world ; all things in heaven and earth do her homage, the very least as feeling her care, and the greatest as not exempted from her power...
Seite 39 - The neighbourhood of the Darnel and Tin keep them perpetually at war, the benefit of which accrues to the Company, who buy all the prisoners made on either side ; and the more there are to sell, the greater is their profit ; for the only end of their armaments is to make captives, to sell them to the White traders.
Seite 168 - ... their own argument of its injustice? If on the ground of injustice it ought to be abolished at last, why ought it not now ? Why is injustice to be suffered to remain for a single hour...
Seite 169 - Africa a scene of bloodshed and misery, a supply of victims increasing in proportion to our demand. Can we then hesitate in deciding whether the wars in Africa are their wars or ours ? It was our arms in the river Cameroon put into the hands of the trader, that furnished him with the means of pushing his trade ; and I have no more doubt that they are British arms put into the hands of Africans, which promote universal war and desolation, than I can doubt their having done so in that individual instance.
Seite 182 - Africa, engaged in the calm occupations of industry, in the pursuits of a just and legitimate commerce. We may behold the beams of science and philosophy breaking in upon their land, which at some...
Seite 3 - Day being read, for the Houfe to refolve itfelf into a Committee of the whole Houfe, to confider of the Petition of the fubfcribing Merchants and Traders of the City of London, fcff.
Seite 100 - If you prick him, does he not bleed ? If you tickle him, does he not laugh ? If you poison him, does he not die ? And if you wrong him, does he not revenge?
Seite 171 - ... is withered and blasted ; under whose shade nothing that is useful or profitable to Africa will ever flourish or take root. Long as that continent has been known to navigators, the extreme line and boundaries of its coasts is all with which Europe is...
Seite 174 - to humanity. We are second to none of you in our zeal for the good of Africa, — but the French will not abolish, — the Dutch will not abolish. We wait, therefore, on prudential principles, till they join us, or set us an example." How, Sir, is this enormous evil ever to be eradicated, if every nation is thus prudentially to wait till the concurrence of all the world shall have been obtained? — Let me remark too, that there is no nation in Europe that has, on the one hand, plunged so deeply...
Seite 183 - Africa, that the measure proposed by my honourable friend most forcibly recommends itself to my mind. The great and happy change to be expected in the state of her inhabitants is, of all the various and important benefits of the abolition, in my estimation, incomparably the most extensive and important.