... in their own country, it is this very system that perpetuates, if not causes, the unhappy condition with which the comparative comfort of some of them in slavery is contrasted. Ethnologists reckon the African as by no means the lowest of the human... The African Repository - Página 2591866Vista completa - Acerca de este libro
| David Livingstone, Charles Livingstone - 1865 - 664 páginas
...the unhappy condition with which the comparative comfort of some of them in slavery is contrasted. Ethnologists reckon the African as by no means the...Even when subjected to that system so destructive to human life, by which they are torn from their native soil, they spring up irrepressibly and darken... | |
| 1865 - 848 páginas
...the unhappy condition with which the comparative comfort of some of them in slavery is contrasted. Ethnologists reckon the African as by no means the...diseases nor the ardent spirits which proved so fatal to North-American Indians, South-Sea Islanders, and Australians, seem capable of annihilating the negroes.... | |
| David Livingstone, Charles Livingstone - 1865 - 690 páginas
...the unhappy condition with which the comparative comfort of some of them in slavery is contrasted. Ethnologists reckon the African as by no means the...human family. He is nearly as strong physically as CHAP. XXIX. HIS APTITUDE FOR SERVICE. 597 the European, and, as a race, is wonderfully persistent among... | |
| David Livingstone, Charles Livingstone - 1866 - 688 páginas
...the unhappy condition with which the comparative comfort of some of them in slavery is contrasted. Ethnologists reckon the African as by no means the...the negroes. Even when subjected to that system so RR ' destructive to human life, by which they are torn from their native soil, they spring up irrepressibly,... | |
| David Livingstone, Charles Livingstone - 1866 - 682 páginas
...the unhappy condition with which the comparative comfort of some of them in slavery is contrasted. Ethnologists reckon the African as by no means the...and, as a race, is wonderfully persistent among the nati&ns of the earth. Neither the diseases nor the ardent spirits which proved so fatal to North American... | |
| British and foreign freed-men's aid society - 1866 - 586 páginas
...and flourish under, a different state. Dr. Livingstone says that the native African ' is nearly aa strong physically as the European, and as a race, is wonderfully persistent among the nations of tho earth.' " 3. The forms of government have a bearing upon opening the country to civilization. Intercourse... | |
| Edward Royall Tyler, William Lathrop Kingsley, George Park Fisher, Timothy Dwight - 1867 - 830 páginas
...or heart. And as to his vitality and power of endurance, it is the testimony of this traveler that "he is nearly as strong physically as the European,...Neither the diseases nor the ardent spirits which have proved so fatal in other cases, he says, seem capable of annihilating the negroes. It is truly... | |
| 1867 - 830 páginas
...endurance, it is the testimony of this traveler that " he is nearly as strong physically as the Eua>pean, and, as a race, is wonderfully persistent among the...Neither the diseases nor the ardent spirits which have proved so fatal in other cases, he says, seem capable of annihilating the negroes. It is truly... | |
| Fisk University - 1876 - 72 páginas
...his mental and physical capacities we propose to speak. Dr. Livingstone tells us that the African is by no means the lowest of the human family. He is nearly as strong physically as the European, and superior to the Australian, the South Sea Islander and the American Indian. He is not of a different... | |
| George Washington Williams - 1882 - 1148 páginas
...the unhappy condition with which the comparative comfort of some of them in slavery is contrasted. "Ethnologists reckon the African as by no means the...diseases nor the ardent spirits which proved so fatal to North-American Indians, SouthSea Islanders, and Australians, seem capable of annihilating the Negroes.... | |
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