The Liberator (newspaper)/September 18, 1857

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The Liberator, September 18, 1857
4531013The Liberator, September 18, 1857


The Liberator

is published

Every Friday Morning,

at the

Anti-Slavery Office, 21 Cornhill.


Robert F. Wallcut, General Agent.


  • Terms—Two dollars and fifty cents per annum, in advance.
  • ☞Five copies will be sent to one address for ten dollars, if payment be made in advance.
  • ☞All remittances are to be made, and all letters relating to the pecuniary concerns of the paper are to be directed, (post paid,) to the General Agent.
  • ☞Advertisements making less than one square inserted three times for 75 cents—one square for $1.00.
  • ☞The Agents of the American, Massachusetts, Pennsylvania, Ohio and Michigan Anti-Slavery Societies are authorised to receive subscriptions for The Liberator.
  • ☞The following gentlemen constitute the Financial Committee, but are not responsible for any of the debts of the paper, viz:—Francis Jackson, Ellis Gray Loring, Edmund Quincy, Samuel Philbrick, and Wendell Phillips.
THE LIBERATOR.
THE LIBERATOR.

No Union With Slaveholders.


The United States Constitution is ‘a covenant with death, and an agreement with hell.’


☞‘The free States are the guardians and essential supports of slavery. We are the jailers and constables of the institution…. There is some excuse for communities, when, under a generous impulse, they espouse the cause of the oppressed in other States, and by force restore their rights; but they are without excuse in aiding other States in binding on men an unrighteous yoke. On this subject, our fathers, in framing the Constitution, swerved from the right. We their children, at the end of half a century, see the path of duty more clearly than they, and must walk in it. To this point the public mind has long been tending, and the time has come for looking at it fully, dispassionately, and with manly and Christian resolution…. No blessing of this Union can be a compensation for taking part in the enslaving of our fellow-creatures; nor ought this bond to be perpetuated, if experience shall demonstrate that it can only continue through our participation in wrong doing. To this conviction the free States are tending.’—William Ellery Channing.



Wm. Lloyd Garrison, Editor.
Our Country is the World, our Countrymen are all Mankind.
J. B. Yerrinton & Son, Printers.


Vol. XXVII. No. 83.
Boston, Friday, September 18, 1857.
Whole Number, 1393.