[From] Plastering, &c.. . . An abolitionist of "no mean city," remarked to us recently, that it was very easy to be an abolitionist and a colonizationist at the same time—that Mrs. H.B. Stowe was—and that many others confessed to like views; by no principles of fairness, do we believe such antagonistical views can be held, but we feel quite sure, that the "Uncle Tom" never struck down many a brave man and woman from the abolition ranks, among white Americans, and we have reason to fear that the epidemic is raging among "leading" colored men. Mrs. Stowe, the grand patroness of the school kept by that very fascinating colonizationist, Miss M. Miner at Washington—Frederick Douglass of evangelical alliance memory, lauding the agent of the Gurleys, McLanes, of Colonization memory and his foul little domain, amid the sands and cactuses of tropical Guinea. What more will we be [illegible] upon to deplore? |