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CHANNING ON SLAVERY.'*
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
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It is a glorious joy to see a great mind grappling with a great question . There is no sublimity like that of genius putting forth its power for the deliverance of humanity . Months of our present existence would be a cheap purchase , could they be given in exchange , for having lived the day when Milton s Defensio was published . Such gladness is to the soul what the Vatican Apollo is to the sense ; and so cognate are the
emotions , that the one suggests , and is a beautiful type or symbol of the other . Thankful were we to hear that the dart of Channing was levelled at the Python of slavery . That it has slain the dragon is much more than we dare to prognosticate . The modern world has bred serpents less vulnerable than those of antiquity , even to the dart of a deity . But it is aimed at the heart ; and fitting was it that the moust ^ r-caischief of America should be encountered bv the master mind of
America . Justice will scarcely be done in this country to the courage which this publication implies in its author . Fhe time is long gone by , and few remember it , when the merchants of Liverpool attempted to jostle Clarkson into the 9 ea . Generally , the cause of abolition was popular ; and especially after the planters provoked the Methodists by interfering with the missionaries . We can have no notion of the feelino * of the
Americans on this subject ; and , perhaps , a full conceptioti of it is only to be attained by actual observation during the recent period of excitement . We have no parallel to their fury , unless it be in that of Orangemen and Catholics . But the Orangemen are dunghill compared with the slavers . Nor is there such a re-action as in Ireland against oppression . The Catholics are competent to their own defence ; the poor
negroes are hors de combat ; they have only philanthropy in their favour . Moreover they , and all their friends , are continually endangered by the impou-nt fanaticism of p hilanthropy . Dr . Channing deems it necessary to disclaim the
Abolitionists , and deprecate their proceedings . The cowardice of the quiet people , whose unprincipled pusillanimity is so predominant a power in all wealthy and commercial states , te opposed even to any discussion of the subject . The cockfr of the south have crowed over the cravens of the north mrtrt they have terrified them into their service , and made them an * Slavery , bv \ V . K . ( 'hnmiini ; - . London Hunter , reprinted I ' mm the Bostou ( l . S . ) edition .
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Channing On Slavery.'*
CHANNING ON SLAVERY . ' *
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No . 112 . O
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Citation
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Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), April 2, 1836, page 198, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2656/page/1/
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