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Browsing named entities in a specific section of C. Edwards Lester, Life and public services of Charles Sumner: Born Jan. 6, 1811. Died March 11, 1874.. Search the whole document.
Found 18 total hits in 10 results.
Mexico (Mexico, Mexico) (search for this): chapter 5
Europe (search for this): chapter 5
Massachusetts (Massachusetts, United States) (search for this): chapter 5
Charles Sumner (search for this): chapter 5
I.
Mr. Sumner's political life was now to begin, and he chose for its opening the occasion of the National Anniversary of 1844, which was to be observed in Boston with unusual interest.
A brief glance at the state of public affairs at the time, will faintly show what significance there was in the choice of the orator, and what important results were to follow his startling utterances.
American slavery was then in the zenith of its fearful and unthreatened reign.
It held the whole natist drifting, body and soul, into the embraces of the slave-power, which was demanding fresh aggressions upon the territory of Mexico, with a view to wrest from her some of her fairest possessions, to be devoted to the demon of human servitude.
Mr. Sumner early foresaw that this would end in a collision with our sister republic, and which, under the dictation of the slave oligarchy, would be attended with outrages and injustice.
The Whigs had been greatly weakened by the death of Harrison, and
Richard Cobden (search for this): chapter 5
William Lloyd Garrison (search for this): chapter 5
John Tyler (search for this): chapter 5
Boston (search for this): chapter 5
Harrison (search for this): chapter 5
1844 AD (search for this): chapter 5
I.
Mr. Sumner's political life was now to begin, and he chose for its opening the occasion of the National Anniversary of 1844, which was to be observed in Boston with unusual interest.
A brief glance at the state of public affairs at the time, will faintly show what significance there was in the choice of the orator, and what important results were to follow his startling utterances.
American slavery was then in the zenith of its fearful and unthreatened reign.
It held the whole nation bound hand and foot.
It dictated every law passed by Congress, and inspired every measure adopted in the Cabinet.
It controlled the Press of a free, and exulted in the sanction of the Pulpit of a Christian, nation.
It was extending its dark shadow over soil then free, and claiming its inhuman jurisdiction over every Northern hearth-stone.
It unblushingly boasted that it would one day call the slave-roll on Bunker Hill—And why should the menace seem so unmeaning?
Had not Boston seen Willi