Narrative of James Williams, an American Slave (1838 Boston Knapp edition) (Q114)

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1838 edition, published by Isaac Knapp in Boston
Language Label Description Also known as
English
Narrative of James Williams, an American Slave (1838 Boston Knapp edition)
1838 edition, published by Isaac Knapp in Boston

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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 | 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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    [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. | 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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    Narrative of James Williams
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    Narrative of James Williams
    running title
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    xxiii, [1], 25-108 pages, 2 leaves
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