| 1817 - 464 pages
...if its prosperity shall equal our wishes, will be alike propitious to every interest of our domestic society ; and should it lead, as we may fairly hope...we shall not be at liberty to plead the excuse of American Colonisation Society. 291 moral necessity, until we shall have honestly exerted all the means... | |
| Methodist Church - 1823 - 494 pages
...equal our wishes, it will be alike propitious to every interest of our domestic economy : and shall it lead, as we may fairly hope it will, to the slow,...institutions the only BLOT which stains them ; and in the palliation of which we shall not be at liberty to plead the excuse of moral necessity, until we... | |
| American Colonization Society - African Americans - 1824 - 862 pages
...its pro«perity shall equal our wishes, will be alike propitious to every interest of our domestic Society; and should it lead, as we may fairly hope...palliation of which we shall not be at liberty to plead tho excuse of moral necessity, until we shall have honestly exerted all the means which we possess... | |
| American Colonization Society - African Americans - 1828 - 612 pages
...if its prosperity shall equal our wishes, will be alike propitious to every interest of our domestic Society; and should it lead, as we may fairly hope...which stains them; and in palliation of which we shall nol be at liberty to plead the excuse of moral necessity, until we shall have honestly exerted all... | |
| African Americans - 1830 - 510 pages
...if its prosperity shall equal our wishes, will be alike propitious to every interest of our domestic society! and should it lead, as we may fairly hope...the excuse of moral necessity, until we shall have exerted all the means which we possess, for its extinction." — [Speech before Col. Soe. General Harper.... | |
| African Americans - 1830 - 398 pages
...if its prosperity shall equal our wishes, will be alike propitious to every interest of our domestic society; and should it lead, as we may fairly hope it will, to the slow, but gradual abo. fition of slavery, it will wipe from our political Institutions, the only blot which stains them;... | |
| African Americans - 1832 - 404 pages
...Institution, if itb prosperity should equal our wishes, will be propitious to every interest of our domestic society; and should it lead, as we may fairly hope...the excuse of moral necessity, until we shall have exerted all the means which we possess, for its extinction.'' Nor was the beneficial efi'ect of the... | |
| North American review and miscellaneous journal - 1832 - 614 pages
...venerable Judge Washington many years since observed, that if the Colonization Society should lead to the slow but gradual abolition of slavery, ' it...political institutions, the only blot which stains them.' The declarations of many other of our illustrious fellow-citizens at the South and West, to the same... | |
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