4 chapters
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4 chapters
CONSIDERATIONS ON THE NEGROE CAUSE COMMONLY SO CALLED,
CONSIDERATIONS ON THE NEGROE CAUSE COMMONLY SO CALLED,
ADDRESSED TO THE RIGHT HONOURABLE LORD MANSFIELD, Lord Chief Justice of the Court of King’s Bench , &c. By SAMUEL ESTWICK, A. M. LL.D. Member of Parliament for the Borough of Westbury . THE THIRD EDITION. LONDON: Printed for J. DODSLEY , in Pall-Mall . M.DCC.LXXXVIII. [ Price 2 s. ]...
26 minute read
ADVERTISEMENT TO THE READER.
ADVERTISEMENT TO THE READER.
THE judgment that was given in the case of Somerset and Knowles, so contrary to the received opinions at that time, and to the general sense of the nation before, having laid the foundation upon which all the various speculations that upon this subject have since been raised, and which are at length so magnified and enlarged as to become the object of a Parliamentary Inquiry; it is imagined, that a review of some of the arguments which were made use of on that occasion may not, in the present mo
1 minute read
PREFACE.
PREFACE.
THE first Edition of the following Considerations on the Negroe Cause was written with haste, and published in a hurry. The hope of seeing some much abler pen than mine engaged in the discussion of so important a question, and yet seemingly so little understood, withheld me from the undertaking; till disappointment made it the resolution of an hour, and want of time the effect of a few days attention only. It was evident that whatever was to have been suggested on the subject, ought to have been
9 minute read
CONSIDERATIONS ON THE NEGROE CAUSE, &c.
CONSIDERATIONS ON THE NEGROE CAUSE, &c.
My Lord, BEING, both by birth and fortune, connected with one of the Islands in America, I was led, somewhat interestedly as your Lordship may suppose, to attend to the arguments that were lately offered in the Court of King’s Bench, in the Case of Somerset the Negroe versus Knowles and others. It was a new case, said to be full of concern to America; and it had engrossed much of general expectation. My object therefore was that of information: but, without meaning to lessen the labours, or depr
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