
Abolition a Sedition
PHILADELPHIA:
GEO. W. DONOHUE,
NO. 22, SOUTH FOURTH STREET.
........
MDCCCXXXIX.
Entered according to the Act of Congress, in theyear 1839, by Geo. W. Donohue, in the Clerk’sOffice of the Eastern District of Pennsylvania.
Transcriber’s Notes:
Obvious printer and typographical errors silently corrected.
Archaic and inconsistent spelling and punctuation retained.
| Page. | ||
| CHAPTER I. | ||
| The character of the Abolition organization | 1 | |
| CHAPTER II. | ||
| The American Anti-slavery Society a seditious organization | 20 | |
| CHAPTER III. | ||
| The seditious character of the Annual Report of the American Anti-slavery Society, of 1838 | 35 | |
| CHAPTER IV. | ||
| The seditious character of the American Anti-slavery Society farther considered | 44 | |
| CHAPTER V. | ||
| Violent reforms, and their connexion with Abolitionism | 57 | |
| CHAPTER VI. | ||
| The Abolition organization borrowed from the religious world | 66 | |
| CHAPTER VII. | ||
| The anarchical principles of Abolitionism | 71 | |
| CHAPTER VIII. | ||
| The incendiary doctrines of Abolitionism | 78 | |
| CHAPTER IX. | ||
| Political responsibility in regard to slavery | 86 | |
| CHAPTER X. | ||
| The romance of Abolitionism | 99 | |
| CHAPTER XI. | ||
| Every man mind his own business | 110 | |
| CHAPTER XII. | ||
| Perfectionism | 114 | |
| CHAPTER XIII. | ||
| Liberty and Equality | 120 | |
| CHAPTER XIV. | ||