in his preface to this last volume, " as an unfortunate circumstance, for which the people of the South were in nowise to blame, and the abolition of which was no more immediately practicable than the abrogation of hospitals, penitentiaries, and boarding-schools,... National Review - Page 2571861Full view - About this book
| Frederick Law Olmsted - 1860 - 508 pages
...state of suspicion and unwholesome excitement was obvious in the public mind. Looking upon slavery as an unfortunate circumstance, for which the people of the South were in no wise to blame, and the abolition of which was no more immediately practicable than the abrogation... | |
| Frederick Law Olmsted - 1860 - 516 pages
...state of suspicion and unwholesome excitement was obvious in the public mind. Looking upon slavery as an unfortunate circumstance, for which the people of the South were in no wise to blame, ami tinabolition of which was no tnore immediately practicable than the abrogation... | |
| Richard Holt Hutton, Walter Bagehot - 1861 - 546 pages
...Tennessee. They will prove, we think, that he is no prejudiced witness. " Looking upon Slavery," he •ays, in his preface to this last volume, " as an unfortunate...were in nowise to blame, and the abolition of which ivas no more immediately practicable than the abrogation of hospitals, penitentiaries, and boarding-schools,... | |
| 1860 - 678 pages
...state of suspicion and unwholesome excitement was obvious in the public mind. Looking upon slavery as an unfortunate circumstance, for which the people of the South were iu no wise to blame, and the abolit.on of which was no more immediately practicable than the abrogation... | |
| Frederick Law Olmsted - 1907 - 322 pages
...state of suspicion and unwholesome excitement was obvious in the public mind. Looking upon slavery as an unfortunate circumstance, for which the people of the South were in no wise to blame, and the abolition of which was no more immediately practicable than the abrogationof... | |
| 1925 - 604 pages
...previously formed opinions as I was when I began my journey in the South. . . . Looking upon slavery as an unfortunate circumstance, for which the people of the South were in no wise to blame, ... it was with the distinct hope of . . . aiding those disposed to consider the... | |
| 1925 - 582 pages
...previously formed opinions as I was when I began my journey In the South. . . . Looking upon slavery as an unfortunate circumstance, for which the people of the South were in no wise to blame, ... It was with the distinct hope of . . . aiding those disposed to consider the... | |
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