F. Colburn (Francis Colburn) Adams
Capitolo 74
The party had now arrived opposite to that known as which was previously
The hotel of Jones, where the Colonel did a halt to report the unusual one
case that had grieved his/her feelings, although he very tenaciously contained
to the law as it was, because he strongly believed in the wisdom of
the judicial arrangement of Carolina Meridionale.
"The our first and the great object it is to prevent the interchange of
the feeling among our national niggers, if the obligation or free, and
niggers that resides to the foreign countries or you/he/she has left our State; To do this it,
become imperative to establish a law that prohibits free negroes from
entering the State and those in the State to go out, under
criminal punishment of imprisonment and fine, if theirs returned. The criminal punishment
amounted to sale on a form of worker; and it submitted the offender to the
slave's system in a way that him was rarely recovered. You want
you observe, Captain, the criminal punishment is not desired by our people the,
object that is impedirloro to return, and as such it owes
is taken in the spirit of his/her origin. Another very wise provision
you/he/she was served as our legislators, and what you/he/she has prevented a lot
suffering from the slave. Some years ago, our wise man
legislature made a law to restore the power of the emancipation from the
judges' axle where you/he/she had been misused a lot of, to the
You Gives hospitality. It is such it is the law a present day that no master
you/he/she can give their liberty to his/her slaves, omits from special action of the
legislature, and that with such multiplicity of provisions and
you condition that the little equal attempt it. But I am almost about to report me to cases
in that it would be said that some change has been necessary,,
because in them the worse germs are incarnate for the abolition
speculation.
"What, Captain, is the hotel" of Jones, says the Colonel sharpening to a,
house that odd-looks at piece of antiquariato and mixed architecture with a great,
convex window above of the room-entry, in the second history. This