Narrative of James Williams, An American Slave; Who Was for Several Years a Driver on a Cotton Plantation in Alabama. (1838 New York American Anti-Slavery Society Edition) (Q111)

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Narrative of James Williams, An American Slave; Who Was for Several Years a Driver on a Cotton Plantation in Alabama. (1838 New York American Anti-Slavery Society Edition)
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    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 la- | bors 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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    [continued] 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. | [line] | SECOND EDITION. | [line] | NEW - YORK: | PUBLISHED BY THE AMERICAN ANTI-SLAVERY SOCIETY, | NO. 143 NASSAU-STREET. | 1838.
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    Narrative of James Williams.
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