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Subjects
Correspondence, Abolitionists, Evangelical Alliance, British and Foreign Anti-slavery Society, Women abolitionists, Antislavery movements, HistoryPeople
Richard Allen (1803-1886), John Robert French (1819-1890), Maria Weston Chapman (1806-1885), Annie Allen, Charles Dickens (1812-1870)Places
United States, Boston, Massachusetts, IrelandTimes
19th centuryShowing 1 featured edition. View all 1 editions?
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Edition Notes
Holograph, signed.
On pages 1-3 of this manuscript, there is a letter from Annie Allen to Maria Weston Chapman. Annie thanks Maria for a copy of last year's Liberty Bell and for Longfellow's translation of Cervantes's tale, La Getanelfu [perhaps La Gitanilla]. Annie sends Maria a copy of Dickinson's "Pictures of Italy" and refers to a critic of Dickens with whom she disagrees. Having enjoyed William Lloyd Garrison's visit, Annie regretted that his stay in Dublin was so short. She comments on the Evangelical Alliance: "would not diabolical alliance be nearer the mark?"
On pages 3-4 of this manuscript, there is a separate letter by Richard Allen to Maria Weston Chapman, dated November 18, 1846. Richard trusts that William Lloyd Garrison's visit will produce great good. The anti-slavery cause needs reviving. Richard writes that "the British & Foreign [Anti-Slavery Society] have shown so much inactivity, that their day unless they bestir themselves is nearly at an end." The Evangelical Alliance has passed a resolution against admitting slaveholders, but Richard Allen looks upon that body as "innocuous for good and evil." He refers to J. R. French's "extraordinary comments & reflections against many of Rogers' old friends..." The Irish "are troubled with gloomy anticipation of famine."
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