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Slavery: letters and speeches

Chapter 33: Transcriber’s Notes
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About This Book

A series of public letters and speeches presents moral, political, and practical arguments against slavery, appealing to youth to choose principle over expedience. It analyzes types of young men—those who inherit beliefs, those who follow popular tides, and those who seek truth—and urges adherence to justice, human brotherhood, and divine law. The texts link abolition to broader themes of moral progress, condemn compromises that postpone freedom, and call for sustained civic action grounded in conscience to secure emancipation and equal rights.

Transcriber’s Notes

Page 24: “chaper 41,” changed to “chapter 41,”

Page 107: “From the speeeh” changed to “From the speech”

Page 161: “Hebpurn et al” changed to “Hepburn et al”

Page 189: “Sierra Neveda” changed to “Sierra Nevada”

Page 190: “not only guranties” changed to “not only guarantees”

Page 239: “36´ 30°” changed to “36° 30´”

Page 265: “leger book” changed to “ledger book”

Page 287: “synonymes given” changed to “synonyms given”

Page 315: “wordly affairs,” changed to “worldly affairs,”

Page 321: “travel though any part” changed to “travel through any part”

Page 333: “reverened and learned” changed to “revered and learned”

Page 336: “be villified” changed to “be vilified”

Page 376: “of New Hamphire” changed to “of New Hampshire”

Page 414: “the apellants” changed to “the appellants”

Page 444: “as orginally” changed to “as originally”

Page 464: “wordly advantages” changed to “worldly advantages”