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Show THE LIBERTY DELL. 194 d n't like them. They treat '' Tho people here o t '' . we were cattle on that n.ccoun . '' us as lf ? - 'cause I like ours best. " But why · But these people know " To be sure; so do I. " b ausc they are savages. no better' cc '' I wonder what we t• 0 dear! '' sighed MEG. ever arc to do." hild . unless it is ''I deed I don't know, my c ' k n remcmberm. g home ' all we can, and pray to cop f our bondage, one day or God tc take us out o other.'' . . e is no doubt striving after If NAN still lives, sh doubt that, d. d there can be no this. If she has te ' . was her . ladness tc get away any how, thiS m her g Asforhehr'ldcretn' they have last thought. . D . ace that they are robably sunk to be the m crtor r pco nstantly d esl.l 'e d to consider themselves. July f.th, 1862. Tli..E YOUNG SAILOR. 195 <1l:IJe !!!onng .Sailor. MAitiA WESTON CHAPMAN, IT was in tho enlightened city of Cambridge, Massachusetts, some years ago, that I once listened to a mass of argument against the abolition of Slavery, that tho dark ages and the dark places of the earth might well be ashamed of. It would put a stop W agriculture, ruin commerce, impoverish the masOOr, distress the Slave, turn back civilization, bring hack barbarism, and thus destroy the prospect. of liberty in the United States, and con· sequently throughout the world. It seemed absurd, indeed, to offer a refut.ation to all this contradictory nonsense from the lips of an American professing to be a Republican and a |