Southern Quarterly Review, Volume 2Daniel Kimball Whitaker, Milton Clapp, William Gilmore Simms, James Henley Thornwell Wiley & Putnam, 1967 |
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Page 328
... proving , that the Ethiopian race " never has commanded nor never can command nature , " -- that it can imitate with great facility , but cannot originate . " Pro- All history and science go to prove , that the Ethiopian is the slave of ...
... proving , that the Ethiopian race " never has commanded nor never can command nature , " -- that it can imitate with great facility , but cannot originate . " Pro- All history and science go to prove , that the Ethiopian is the slave of ...
Page 343
... prove the fact , that the severe and unremitting toil of large classes of the nominal freemen of proud England , deforms the body , im- pairs the health , breaks the constitution , and swells the bills of mortality . They also prove ...
... prove the fact , that the severe and unremitting toil of large classes of the nominal freemen of proud England , deforms the body , im- pairs the health , breaks the constitution , and swells the bills of mortality . They also prove ...
Page 450
... prove its correctness . There it would be , stamped upon the human mind , wherever man is found , in " the ineffaceable characters " which Kant supposes , to be known and read of all men , and if in- effaceable , not liable to change ...
... prove its correctness . There it would be , stamped upon the human mind , wherever man is found , in " the ineffaceable characters " which Kant supposes , to be known and read of all men , and if in- effaceable , not liable to change ...
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abolitionists American ancient appear Aristotle Athens beauty better Bolingbroke British called Canaan cause Champollion Channing character Christianity Cicero citizens civil classes Colchians common constitution Demosthenes divine doctrine doubt duty Egypt Egyptians England equal Euripides existence fact feeling friends genius give Greece Greek heart Herodotus Hesiod History of Literature honor human idea influence instinct institutions intellectual interest Japheth justice king labor liberty literature living marriage master ment mind Mongul moral nations nature never opinion Osiris party peculiar persons philosophy Plato poetry political possess present principles prove punishment race readers reason regard religion religious remarkable Revelation Rhode Island Roman Rome Scripture sense servants slavery slaves society soul South Southern spirit supposed theory thing tion Transcendentalists true truth Whewell Whig whole writers Zanoni