No Compromise with Slavery / An Address Delivered to the Broadway Tabernacle, New York
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About This Book
An impassioned address argues that abolition must be absolute: slavery contradicts the Declaration's assertion of equal, inalienable rights and cannot be reconciled with genuine patriotism, religion, or law. The speaker defends radical abolitionism, condemning institutional complicity—from pulpits and political parties to measures like the Fugitive Slave Law—and indicts national hypocrisy that professes liberty while sustaining bondage. He rejects compromise as moral cowardice, frames the struggle in religious and ethical terms, warns that the Slave Power corrupts civic life, and expresses confidence that steadfast principle and divine justice will ultimately vindicate emancipation.
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