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" Every unmarried white man, and of every class, has his black or his brown mistress, with whom he lives openly ; and of so little consequence is this thought, that his white female friends and relations think it no breach of decorum to visit his house,... "
Colonial Slavery: Letters to the Right Hon. William Huskisson, President of ... - Page 23
by John Ashton Yates - 1824 - 86 pages
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Spirit of the English Magazines, Volume 14

1824 - 494 pages
...openly ; and of so little consequence is this thonght, thiit his white female friends and relations think it no breach of decorum to visit his house,...which they regarded as disgraceful in their own class, was not so in the lemule of colour. If a gentleman pays his addresses to a lady, it is not thought...
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Museum Americanum, Or, Select Antiquities, Curiosities, Beauties, and ...

Charles Hulbert - America - 1823 - 374 pages
...openly ; and of so little consequence is this thought, that his white female friends and relations think it no breach of decorum to visit his house,...which they regarded as disgraceful in their own class, was not so in the female of colour. This profligacy is, however, less common than it was formerly ;...
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A View of the Past and Present State of the Island of Jamaica: With Remarks ...

John Stewart - Jamaica - 1823 - 406 pages
...openly ; and of so li ttle consequence is this thought, that his white female friends and relations think it no breach of decorum to visit his house,...which they regarded as disgraceful in their own class, was not so in the female of colour. The example of a few ladies of a juster way of thinking has little...
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Substance of the Debate in the House of Commons, on the 15th May, 1823, on a ...

Great Britain. Parliament House of Commons - Antislavery movements - 1823 - 476 pages
...openly : and of so little consequence is this thought, that his White female friends and relations think it no breach of decorum to visit his house,...his children, and converse with his house-keeper." — " But the most striking proof of the low estimate of moral and religious obligation here, is the...
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An Appeal to the Religion, Justice, and Humanity of the Inhabitants of the ...

William Wilberforce - Abolitionists - 1823 - 642 pages
...openly : and of so little consequence is this thought, that his While female fritndi and relations think it no breach of decorum to visit his house,...his children, and converse with his house-keeper," — " But the most striking proof of the low estimate of moral and religious obligation here, is the...
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A View of the Past and Present State of the Island of Jamaica: With Remarks ...

John Stewart - Jamaica - 1823 - 400 pages
...lives openly; and of so little consequence is this thought, that his white female friends and relations think it no breach of decorum to visit his house,...hospitality, fondle his children, and converse with his housekeeper—as if that conduct, which they regarded as disgraceful in their own class, was not so...
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Substance of the Debate in the House of Commons, on the 15th May, 1823, on a ...

Great Britain. Parliament. House of Commons - Antislavery movements - 1823 - 586 pages
...lives openly: and of so little consequence is this thought, that his While female friends and relations think it no breach of decorum to visit his house,...hospitality, fondle his children, and converse with hit house- keeper." — " But the most striking proof of the low estimate of moral and religious obligation...
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The New Annual Register, Or General Repository of History, Politics, and ...

English poetry - 1824 - 856 pages
...openly ; and of so little consequence is this thought, that his white female friends and relations think it no breach of decorum to visit his house,...which they regarded as disgraceful in their own class, was not so in the female of colour. But the most striking proof of the low estimate of moral and religious...
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The Colonial Controversy: Containing a Refutation of the Calumnies of the ...

James MacQueen - Enslaved persons - 1825 - 234 pages
...openly ; and of so little consequence is this thought, that his white female friends and relations think it no breach of decorum to visit his house,...fondle his children, and converse with his housekeeper. But the most striking proof of that low estimate of moral and religious obligation here, is the fact,...
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The Colonial Controversy: Containing a Refutation of the Calumnies of the ...

James MacQueen - Enslaved persons - 1825 - 236 pages
...openly ; and of so little consequence is this thought, that his white female friends and relations think it no breach of decorum to visit his house, partake of ha hospitality, fondle his children, and converse with his housekeeper. But the most striking proof...
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