[12] Pol. lib. i. c. 3. In like spirit are the words of the good Las Casas, when pleading before Charles the Fifth for the Indian races of America. "The Christian religion," he said, "is equal in its operation, and is accommodated to every nation on the globe. It robs no one of his freedom, violates none of his inherent rights, on the ground that he is a slave by nature, as pretended; and it well becomes your Majesty to banish so monstrous an oppression from your kingdoms in the beginning of your reign, that the Almighty may make it long and glorious."—Prescott's Conquest of Mexico, vol. i. p 379.
[13] Institute i. tit. 2.
[14] Re Rustica, § 2.
[15] Ep. iii. 62.
[16] Iliad, book i.
[17] Book ii. chap. 20, Life of St. Wolston.
[18] Chronica Hiberniæ, or the Annals of Phil. Flatesbury in the Cottonian Library, Domitian A. xviii. 10; quoted in Stephens on West India Slavery, vol. i. p. 6
[19] Encyclopédie Méthodique, (Jurisprudence,) Art. Esclavage.
[20] Biot, De l'Abolition de l'Esclavage Ancien en Occident, p. 440; a work crowned with a gold medal by the Institute of France, but which will be read with some disappointment.
[21] Koran, chap. 76.