We need not admit nol- deny here the right of self-defence, whatever those rights are, they are secondary to the claims of society. In some places, tne people are so engrosseu in business, that they pay but little attention to this movement ; in others, church influence prevails, and the 4 stay away plan' is adopted, that being the only effectual mode of arresting this agitation ; and then again, where Liberty party has made considerable progress, where the political rather than the moral aspects of the cause have been dwelt upon, the symjuithiea of the abolitionists have not only been perverted, and made to subserve the interests of a political party, but the better feelings 6f the community seem to have been paralyzed by its action, and we find the people as cold and unfeeling as the senseless iron they help to rivet around the neck of their brother. Public attention has been aroused sympathy, whichhad heretofore been dammed up in its cold and icychannels, has been elicited in behalf of the oppressed. the poor-house of Northampton, is, and has been for years, , an honest, intelligent old snip-, master, Capt.

As 1 stepped round to look at the figures on the sides of the pedestal, I 'came to the south side, and there saw-faces that appeared perfectly familiar. We defy their power, and de-smse their principles. T Fire c. Edition of The Liberator. 1 have now seen all of Strasburg 1 am to see. The Whigs and Democrats ought to blush, we think, to , stand up under the picture of 4 Washington, and insult his fame and libel his humanity as they do. millions of 'dollars whieh oar government engaged to pay for Louisiana, less than five millions waa to.

I–XXXV). Had I refused him a siglu of my book, be would have had me in the lock-up, the miserable tool of despotism! Share It In "Washington's Runaway Slave," published in the abolitionist newspaper the Liberator of Boston on August 22, 1845, the Reverend T. H. Adams interviews Oney Judge, who ran away from the household of President George Washington in 1796. . Wilxjam Smith, blind and feeble, . I regret that you have not called to the Chair, a person more calculated to give to your deliberations the sanction of matured age and experience, v Since you have thought it proper to select me, I can only say that I am ready and willing, on the subject about to come before us, to take any position, far -more humble than this, that may be assigned to me. 'The only difference between him and the Whigs is, that he thinks and declares it is an outrageous business, 4 devised, in hell by fiends,' and the Whigs think, or pretend to think, that it was devised by George Washing-, ton, and Benjamin Franklin, and Thomas Jefferson, &c. and is just the thing. '

Shall we record our approbation of this last act of wrong, or shall we, by silence, suffer our opiuion of it to be misconstrued into approbation ? COUNTRYMEN ARE ALL MANKIND. Mrs. Maria Weston Chapman is an amiable, accomplished lady, a beautiful writer, and, no doubt, truly a philanthropist. Man is superior to all political compacts, all governmental arrangements, all religious institutions. I can understand and enjoy it all. In th Cathedral again, to hear high mass performed. them back. "An Act to Explain and Amend an Act Entitled 'An Act for the Gradual Abolition of Slavery'" (March 29, 1788)Though a house servant, she had no education, nor any valuable religious instruction; says she never heard Washington pray, and does not believe that he was accustomed to. And why is it, that this poor man ia . It is an inhuman process. . Be the first one to . ' In some cases, this influence obtains, and our meetings are small ; but, as general thing, we have no reason to complain of a want of bearers.

They have never yet heard it distinctly expressed, on this peculiar part of the subject. Colonel Miller, ia his re ' cent visit to W orcester, stated, that of the fifteen- -. Here is a specimen : Now we suppose Capt.

WM you was served right bv vour own showing, and you know it, or you would not have asserted that you did not repent jj for if you had done right, and your conscience approved, how is it iKssible you would have thought that any body else would have expected you to repent? They see that the provisions of that . I never before saw expressed in marble, for the whole is done in the purest white marble, and as large as life, such tenderness, such solicitude, such anguish, as appear in that fe male countenance. ' Oft have I seen mothers straggling, in anguish, to keep back from death the bodies of those loved ones that have been nursed and caressed in their bosoms.