Читать книгу American Slavery as It is: Testimonies - Theodore Dwight Weld - Страница 2
На сайте Литреса книга снята с продажи.
Table of Contents
ОглавлениеIntroduction
Personal Narratives
Narrative of Nehemiah Caulkins
Narrative of Rev. Horace Moulton
Narrative of Sarah M. Grimke
Testimony of Rev. John Graham
Testimony of William Poe
Privations of the Slaves
Food
Labor
Clothing
Dwellings
Treatment of the Sick
Personal Narratives, Part II.
Testimony of the Rev. William T. Allan
Narrative of William Leftwich
Testimony of Lemuel Sapington
Testimony of Mrs. Lowry
Testimony of William C. Gildersleeve
Testimony of Hiram White
Testimony of John M. Nelson
Testimony of Angelina Grimke Weld
Testimony of Cruelty Inflicted Upon Slaves
Punishments
Slave Driving
Cruelty to Slaves
Tortures of Slaves
Personal Narratives, Part III.
Narrative of Rev. Francis Hawley
Testimony of Reuben C. Macy, and Richard Macy
Testimony of Rev. William Scales
Testimony of Jos. Ide
Testimony of Rev. Phineas Smith
Testimony of Phil'n Bliss
Testimony of Rev. Wm. A. Chapin
Testimony of T. M. Macy
Testimony of F. C. Macy
Testimony of a Clergyman
Objections Considered
Objection I.--"Such Cruelties are Incredible."
Objection II.--"Slaveholders Protest That They Treat Their Slaves Well."
Objection III.--"Slaveholders Are Proverbial for Their Kindness, and Generosity
Objection IV.--"Northern Visitors at the South Testify That the Slaves Are Not Cruelly Treated"
Objection V.--"It is for the Interest of the Masters to Treat Their Slaves Well."
Objection VI.--"Slaves Multiply; a Proof That They Are Not Inhumanly Treated, and Are in a Comfortable Condition"
Objection VII.--"Public Opinion is a Protection to the Slave"