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Letter from Anne Warren Weston, Boston, to the Boston Female Anti-slavery Society, Aug. 21, 1837

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Boston Female Anti-slavery Society

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Holograph.Anne Warren Weston has been directed by the Board of the Boston Female Anti-slavery Society to address the members at this time to assure them that, while "the hearts of many appear failing them for fear, yet it is not so with us." It is a solemn duty to renew our vows of consecration to the cause of the American slave." The main body of this epistle is concerned with the public appearances of women as abolitionists. Opponents of women's public speaking base their strictures on St. Paul's 5th chapter of Timothy. She is not surprised at this. "The theologians who justify the enslaving of a certain portion of their fellow men ... are the very people whom we might naturally expect to find perverting the same sacred oracles ... to sanction the doctrines of woman's & subordination." She emphasizes that this point of view is harmful to a man's character. She sets forth the two differing opinions among women, one favoring dependence and subordination, the other, while cheerfully fulfilling its domestic obligations, is not prepared to declare in favor of subservience. The right social intercourse between men and women is destroyed not through a false position occupied by some of womankind, but by "mankind remaining in one." She now calls attention to the Misses Grimke: "We feel it to be both a duty & privilege to utter our convictions relative to their heroic & noble career." Starting from the attempt being made to injure the effect of the Grimkes'...
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