| William Lloyd Garrison - African Americans - 1832 - 250 pages
...fruits of our labor. Let these moderate requests be granted, and we need not go to Africa nor any where else, to be improved and happy. We cannot but doubt...motives of those persons who deny us these requests, and would send us to Africa, to gain what they might give us at home. ' But they say, the prejudices of... | |
| William Lloyd Garrison - African Americans - 1832 - 278 pages
...fruits of our labor. Let these moderate requests be granted, and we need not go to Africa nor any where else, to be improved and happy. We cannot but doubt...motives of those persons who deny us these requests, and would send us t6 Africa, to gain what they might give us at home. ' But they say, the prejudices of... | |
| William Lloyd Garrison - African Americans - 1832 - 264 pages
...happy. We cannot but doubt the purity of the motives of those persons who deny us these requests, and would send us to Africa, to gain what they might give us at home. ' But they say, the prejudices of the country against us are invincible ; and as they cannot be conquered,... | |
| Jerome A. McDuffie, Gary Wayne Piggrem, Steven E. Woodworth - Study Aids - 1990 - 650 pages
...fruits of our labour. Let these moderate requests be granted, and we need not go to Africa nor anywhere else to be improved and happy. We cannot but doubt...motives of those persons who deny us these requests, and would send us to Africa to gain what they might give us at home. The African Colonization Society is... | |
| Jerome A. McDuffie, Gary Wayne Piggrem, Steven E. Woodworth - Study Aids - 1990 - 650 pages
...happy. We cannot but doubt the purity of the motives of those persons who deny us these requests, and would send us to Africa to gain what they might give us at home. The African Colonization Society is a numerous and influential body. Would they lay aside their own... | |
| Dorothy Porter, Dorothy Porter Wesley - Literary Criticism - 1995 - 686 pages
...happy. We cannot but doubt the purity of the motives of those persons who deny us these requests, and would send us to Africa to gain what they might give us at home. should be removed beyond their influence. This plea should never proceed from the lips of any man who... | |
| Philip Sheldon Foner, Robert J. Branham - History - 1998 - 952 pages
...fruits of our labour. Let these moderate requests be granted, and we need not go to Africa nor anywhere else to be improved and happy. We cannot but doubt...motives of those persons who deny us these requests, and would send us to Africa to gain what they might give us at home. But they say the prejudices of the... | |
| Josh Gottheimer - History - 2003 - 576 pages
...happy. We cannot but doubt the purity of the motives of those persons who deny us these requests, and would send us to Africa to gain what they might give us at home. The African Colonization Society is a numerous and influential body. Would they lay aside their own... | |
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