Substance of the Debate in the House of Commons on the 15th May, 1823, on a Motion for the Mitigation and Gradual Abolition of Slavery Throughout the British Dominions: With a Pref. and Appendixes Containing Facts and Reasonings Illustrative of Colonial Bondage |
Contents
K Emancipation is no remedy for bad morals | 174 |
O Charge of Inaccuracy against Mr Wilberforce | 184 |
P Charge of bad intention against the author | 193 |
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abolished abolition admit African appears Assembly authority Barbadoes barbarism bondage Bramber British Buxton cart-whip Christian civil Colonel Arthur Coloured condition consideration crime cruelty danger degradation Demarara Dominica duty effect Ellis emancipation enacted evil exist fact favour feel flogging freedom George Rose Government Governor happy Honduras honourable and learned honourable Member House of Commons humanity improvement Indians interests island Jamaica Jamaica Assembly justice labour lash learned Friend liberty magistrates Majesty's Majesty's Government manumission manumitted marriage master means measures ment moral Negro Slavery object oppression owner parish Parliament persons plantation planters present principle produced proprietors prove punishment question religion religious instruction Report respect returns right honourable friend right honourable Gentleman Samuel Nottingham shew shewn Sierra Leone Slave population Slave Trade statement Sunday testimony thing tion Tortola West Indies West-Indian whip White whole Wilberforce