A Review of Uncle Tom's Cabin eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 201 pages of information about A Review of Uncle Tom's Cabin.

A Review of Uncle Tom's Cabin eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 201 pages of information about A Review of Uncle Tom's Cabin.
not as honest inquirers after truth, but with a view of finding something that will give support to some preconceived opinion, doctrine, creed or ceremony.  That will give support to some abstruse doctrine, form or ceremony, which has no direct reference, whatever, to their eternal interests, nor to their duty and obligations to their Creator, nor yet to their fellow creatures.  Their motives and intentions are dishonest, their professions insincere and hypocritical, and it is not in the power of their bigoted and corrupt minds to comprehend, “whatsoever things are true, whatsoever things are honest, whatsoever things are just, whatsoever things are pure, whatsoever things are lovely, whatsoever things are of good report.”

CONTENTS.

INTRODUCTION.—­SECTION I.

Abolition editors.  Their statements false,

Letter writers travel South—­Misrepresentations,

Northern men mislead by abolition papers, and Uncle Tom’s Cabin,

Sectional hatred is engendered thereby, and the Union endangered.  Slavery agitation has retarded emancipation, riveted the chains of slavery, and inflicted injury on masters and servants,

The revolutionary designs and tendencies of abolitionism,

The Union based on the slavery compromise,

Those who invade the rights of the South, are guilty of not only a civil, but also of a moral trespass.  The primitive church was subordinate to the civil authorities.  Language of Christ and his Apostles,

Contrast between Christ and his Apostles, and the apostles of modern reform,

SECTION II.

Is universal emancipation safe or practicable?  What would be the consequences?

Idleness, vagrancy and crime, the fruits of emancipation,

There is not a free negro in the limits of the United States,

Universal prejudice against the African race.  The African no where allowed the ordinary privileges of the white man,

Free negroes of Baltimore—­their appeal to the people of the United States.  Judge Blackford.  Dr. Miller,

Slavery agitation of foreign origin.  Slavery not extinct in the British dominions.  The English poor,

White slavery and negro slavery,

The condition of African slaves in the United States better than the mass of European laborers.  Slavery exists in every part of the British dominions,

British Asiatic Journal.  Dr. Bowering.  Duke of Wellington.  Sir Robert Peel and the London Times,

Madame Stowe has caricatured, slandered and misrepresented her country, to please the English people.  She is invited to England.

Reflections.  The wreck of nations.  Cardinal virtues.  Bigotry and fanaticism.  Advice to ladies,

SECTION III.

Declaration of an English nobleman.  Destruction of the government of the United States, by the Sovereigns of Europe.  Their allies, aiders and abettors in the United States.  Uncle Tom’s Cabin.  Mrs. Stowe in England,

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
A Review of Uncle Tom's Cabin from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.