Footnote 164: [(return)]
See "The Anti-Slavery Picknick: a collection of Speeches, Poems, Dialogues, and Songs, intended for use in schools and anti-slavery meetings. By John A. Collins, Boston, 1842," 10-12.

Footnote 165: [(return)]
It is worthy of note that this argument, which was long thought to be fallacious, is more and more coming to be substantiated by the researches of scholars, and that not only as affecting Northern but also Negro Africa. Note Lady Lugard (Flora L. Shaw): A Tropical Dependency, London, 1906, pp. 16-18.

Footnote 166: [(return)]
Hart: Slavery and Abolition, 245-6.

Footnote 167: [(return)]
Bliss Perry: "Whittier for To-Day," Atlantic Monthly, Vol. 100, 851-859 (December, 1907).

Footnote 168: [(return)]
The italics are our own.

Footnote 169: [(return)]
Note McMaster, V, 200-204.

Footnote 170: [(return)]
Note especially "Connecticut's Canterbury Tale; its Heroine, Prudence Crandall, and its Moral for To-Day, by John C. Kimball," Hartford (1886).

Footnote 171: [(return)]
Hart, 221, citing Liberator, V, 59.

Footnote 172: [(return)]
Hart, 216, citing Channing, Works, V. 57.

Footnote 173: [(return)]
Justin H. Smith: The War with Mexico, I, 107.