Narrative of James Williams, an American Slave (1838 Boston Knapp edition) (Q114): Difference between revisions
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Latest revision as of 19:36, 11 July 2023
1838 edition, published by Isaac Knapp in Boston
Language | Label | Description | Also known as |
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English | Narrative of James Williams, an American Slave (1838 Boston Knapp edition) |
1838 edition, published by Isaac Knapp in Boston |
Statements
NARRATIVE | OF | JAMES WILLIAMS, | AN | AMERICAN SLAVE, | WHO WAS FOR SEVERAL YEARS A DRIVER ON A COTTON | PLANTATION IN ALABAMA | “Oh the slave, who toils from the rising sun to sundown--who | labors in the cultivation of a crop whose fruits he may never reap-- | who comes home at nightfall weary, faint, and sick of heart, to find | in his hut creatures that are to run in the same career
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[2] with himself, | --will you not tell him of a period when his toil shall be at an end? | Will you not give him a hope for his children?" | Speech of O'Connell. London, 1833. | NEW YORK: | PUBLISHED BY THE AMERICAN ANTI-SLAVERY SOCIETY , | NO. 143 NASSAU STREET. | BOSTON: | ISAAC KNAAP, 25 CORNHILL. | [rule] | 1838.
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[rule] STEREOTYPED AT GEO. A. & J. CURTIS'S | TYPE & STEREOTYPE FOUNDRY.--BOSTON. | [rule]
back of title page
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15.5 https://blackbibliog.rutgers.edu/entity/Q61
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9.5 https://blackbibliog.rutgers.edu/entity/Q61
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