Part III
. Sec. 2, Mem. 5, Subs. 5. He quotes Kemnicius, _Examen Concil. Trident., Pars III., De Cœlibatu Sacerdotum_.
[74] Life and Character of Patrick Henry, Sec. II. p. 34.
[75] Massinger, The City Madam, Act V. sc. 1.
[76] West Tennessee Democrat.
[77] Scott, Lay of the Last Minstrel, Notes, Canto V. st. 29.
[78] “Dominum ac servum nullis educationis deliciis dignoscas. Inter eadem pecora, in eadem humo degunt.”--_Germania_, c. 20.
[79] Butler, Lives of the Saints, Vol. XII. p. 114.
[80] This is a natural incident of Slavery. Bishop Warburton, in a sermon before the Society for the Propagation of the Gospel in Foreign Parts, recounts how “a very worthy benefactor bequeathed unto us in trust, for the propagation of the Gospel, a plantation stocked with slaves,” and he exclaims, “An odd legacy to the promulgators of the Law of Liberty!”--_Sermon XX._: Works, (London, 1811,) Vol. X. p. 58.
[81] Jortin, Life of Erasmus, A. D. 1532, Ætat. 65, Vol. II. p. 31.
[82] Louis Blanc, Histoire de la Révolution Française, Tom. V. p. 200.
[83] Grand Gulf Advertiser, June 27, 1837.
[84] New Orleans Bee, May 23, 1838.
[85] Narrative and Testimony of Sarah M. Grimké, found in the remarkable contribution to the Antislavery cause by Theodore D. Weld, American Slavery as it is, Testimony of a Thousand Witnesses, p. 22.
[86] There are two different pictures of this early scene,--one by Terburg, and the other by Adrian van Ostade,--both engraved by Suyderhoef.
[87] Letter to Thomas Percival, July 17, 1784: Works, ed. Sparks, Vol. X. p. 108.
[88] Sabine, Notes on Duels and Duelling, pp. 322, 324.
[89] Speech in the Senate, February 28, 1852: Congressional Globe, 32d Cong. 1st Sess., p. 655.
[90] L’Esclavage des Nègres, ou l’Heureux Naufrage. See Grimm, Correspondance, Tom. XVI. pp. 328, 329, Décembre, 1789.
[91] Address to the Inhabitants of New Mexico and California, by William Jay: Miscellaneous Writings, p. 536.
[92] This was the case with Mr. Sumner’s speech, “The Crime against Kansas.” More than one person found with a copy of this speech was compelled to flee.
[93] Coleridge, Fire, Famine, and Slaughter.
[94] “Quorum verba in pugnis sunt, et syllogismi in calcibus.”
[95] Southey, History of Brazil, Vol. II. ch. 27, p. 536.
[96] Journal of Thomas Chalkley, p. 274.
[97] Hon. Owen Lovejoy, who died March 25, 1864.
[98] Acts of the General Assembly of the State of Georgia, 1831, December 26, p. 256.
[99] Report of Committee of U. S. House of Representatives, 27th Cong. 2d Sess., No. 80, January 20, 1843.
[100] Boswell’s Life of Johnson, October 2, 1773, ed. Croker, (London, 1835,) Vol. IV. p. 311. See also, anno 1768, Vol. III. pp. 41, 42.
[101] Massachusetts Senate Documents, 1845, No. 4. Acts of the General Assembly of South Carolina, 1844, December 18: Statutes at Large, Vol. XI. pp. 292, 293.
[102] Congressional Globe, 36th Cong. 1st Sess., p. 595, January 26, 1860.
[103] History of the Rebellion,