I found the street thronged and noisy with turbulent respectability and unwashed rascality. I was anxious for my young sister, who I knew was in the women's anti-slavery meeting ; but I heard that the ladies had all left and were safe. The fury of the... The Race Problem and Other Critiques - Стр. 98авторы: Henry Whitcomb Holley - 1891 - Страниц: 143Полный просмотр - Подробнее о книге
| Samuel Thomas Pickard - 1894 - Страниц: 442
...sister, who I knew was in the women's anti-slavery meeting ; but I heard that the ladies had all left and were safe. The fury of the mob seemed to be directed...Samuel J. May and myself followed, and visited him in prison. I could sympathize with him, for only a short time before, the Concord mob, which could not... | |
| John Greenleaf Whittier - 1894 - Страниц: 478
...sister, who I knew was in the women's anti-slavery meeting ; but I heard that the ladies had all left and were safe. The fury of the mob seemed to be directed...Samuel J. May and myself followed, and visited him in prison. I could sympathize with him, for only a short time before, the Concord mob, which could not... | |
| John Greenleaf Whittier - 1894 - Страниц: 610
...sister, who I knew was in the women's anti-slavery meeting ; but I heard that the ladies had all left and were safe. The fury of the mob seemed to be directed...Samuel J. May and myself followed, and visited him in prison. I could sympathize with him, for only a short time before, the Concord mob, which could not... | |
| Samuel Thomas Pickard - 1894 - Страниц: 440
...sister, who I knew was in the women's anti-slavery meeting ; but I heard that the ladies had all left and were safe. The fury of the mob seemed to be directed...Samuel J. May and myself followed, and visited him in prison. I could sympathize with him, for only a short time before, the Concord mob, which could not... | |
| Helen Archibald Clarke - 1911 - Страниц: 468
...Garrison, Jr. (Printed by the Bostonian Soc'y.) STATUE OF WILLIAM LLOYD GARRISONCOMMONWEALTH AVENUE, BOSTON fury of the mob seemed to be directed against George...Samuel J. May and myself followed, and visited him in prison." This was the climax of a series of mob experiences through which Thompson had passed, and... | |
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