An Inquiry Into the Law of Negro Slavery in the United States of America to Whi

Cover An Inquiry Into the Law of Negro Slavery in the United States of America to Whi
An Inquiry Into the Law of Negro Slavery in the United States of America to Whi
Cobb, Thomas Read Rootes, 1823-1862
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Ii, Haiti. " 3 See Walstron's Essay on Colonization, as above ; Paulding, on Slavery in the United States, 59.
WHAT IS SLAVERY. 39 ting the existence of individual exceptions. In their native wilds, with a most productive soil, they have recourse to the " most revolting food, as frogs, li- zards, serpents, spiders, the larvaa of insects, &c. &C. " 1 In the free West India Islands, the same in- dolence appears, and is excused on account of cli- mate, &c. And, even in the cold climate of the Nort
...hern States, where the apology fails to apply, the result of the labored efforts of philanthropists, aided by the sympathies of the whole community, is " idleness, insolence, and profligacy. " 2 34. The negro is not malicious. His disposition is to forgive injuries, and to forget the past. 3 His gratitude is sometimes enduring, and his fidelity often remarkable. His passions and affections are seldom very strong, and are never very lasting. The dance will allay his most poignant grief, 4 and"" a few days blot out the memory of his most bitter bereavement.

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