Browsing named entities in Charles Congdon, Tribune Essays: Leading Articles Contributing to the New York Tribune from 1857 to 1863. (ed. Horace Greeley). You can also browse the collection for Paul or search for Paul in all documents.

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Charles Congdon, Tribune Essays: Leading Articles Contributing to the New York Tribune from 1857 to 1863. (ed. Horace Greeley), University Wanted. (search)
of classical and mathematical Carthage, dear old Harvard and always respectable Yale, Dartmouth, which produced Rufus Choate, and all other Northern seminaries whatever. No wonder The Louisiana Democrat looks forward to such a foundation with pleasant emotions, and anticipates a new impetus to the science, learning and literature of a great country. A Southern University! What a pleasing notion! How suggestive of exegesis, cumulative and conclusive, concerning Joseph, Abraham and Moses, Paul and Onesimus, illustrating the true significance of doulos, and historically, critically and classically proving, that a nigger is not a white man — a position which considering that nobody has disputed it, our Southern philosophers seem to be over eager to establish — bursting upon us with rekindling ethnological light, and sweetly and sagely conducting us to a serene acquiescence in the sanctity of slaveholding! This is what a Southern University would do; this is why a Southern University
Charles Congdon, Tribune Essays: Leading Articles Contributing to the New York Tribune from 1857 to 1863. (ed. Horace Greeley), A Church going into business. (search)
ces upon the altar of the Cumberland faith? When one of them shall see a new pine steeple glittering with fresh and radiant paint, as it shoots into the air, he may take off his hat, if he have one, and exclaim: That is my leg! When a precious pentecostal season arrives, and the crop of Cumberland Christians is fast ripening for a glorious harvest, how pleasing it will be for one of the Presbytery's negroes to cry: Behold the work of these ten stubbed fingers and of these brawny arms! I am Paul and Apollos — behold the glorious increase which God has given! Here, then, is another evidence of the unnumbered blessings of Slavery! Which one of all of us, fervid as may be our devotion, and tender as may be our sympathy with the benighted and gall-embittered world, will do for the Great Cause what these Kentucky negroes will do? When the clinking boxes are going up and down the aisles, and with much fervor and noise we deposit our sixpences and shillings, we undoubtedly experience a