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Acknowledgements | p. v |
Introduction | p. 1 |
Speak to Those Who Are in Slavery | p. 20 |
You Stand on the Level with the Greatest Kings on Earth | p. 27 |
A Charge Delivered to the Brethren of the African Lodge | p. 38 |
Pray God Give us the Strength to Bear Up Under All Our Troubles | p. 45 |
Address to the People of Color | p. 52 |
Eulogy for Washington | p. 56 |
Universal Salvation | p. 59 |
Abolition of the Slave Trade | p. 66 |
A Thanksgiving Sermon | p. 73 |
Mutual Interest, Mutual Benefit, and Mutual Relief | p. 80 |
A Sermon Preached on the Funeral Occasion of Mary Henery | p. 86 |
O! Africa | p. 91 |
Valedictory Address | p. 98 |
The Condition and Prospects of Haiti | p. 101 |
Termination of Slavery | p. 104 |
The Necessity of a General Union Among Us | p. 110 |
Slavery and Colonization | p. 114 |
It is Time For Us to be Up and Doing | p. 123 |
Why Sit Ye Here and Die? | p. 125 |
Let Us Alone | p. 130 |
What If I Am a Woman? | p. 135 |
Eulogy on William Wilberforce | p. 143 |
The Slavery of Intermperance | p. 145 |
Why a Convention is Necessary | p. 154 |
Put on the Armour Of Righteousness | p. 158 |
The Slave has a Friend in Heaven, Though He May Have None Here | p. 163 |
On the Improvement of the Mind | p. 166 |
Predudice Against the Colored Man | p. 168 |
We Meet the Monster Prejudice Every Where | p. 178 |
Slavery Presses Down Upon the Free People of Color | p. 179 |
Let Us Do Justic to an Unfortunate People | p. 182 |
The Rights of Colored Citizens in Traveling | p. 189 |
We Must Assert Our Rightful Claims and Plead Our Own Cause | p. 194 |
An Address to the Slaves of the United States of America | p. 198 |
For the Dissolution of the Union | p. 205 |
I am Free from American Slavery | p. 208 |
Under the Stars and Stripes | p. 210 |
I Have No Constitution, and No Country | p. 213 |
A Plea for the Oppressed | p. 220 |
I Won't Obey the Fugitive Slave Law | p. 223 |
Ar'nt I a Woman? | p. 226 |
Orators and Oratory | p. 229 |
What, to the Slave, Is The Fourth of July? | p. 246 |
Snakes and Geese | p. 269 |
I Set Out to Escape from Slavery | p. 271 |
There is no Full Enjoyment of Freedom for Anyone | p. 273 |
The Triumph of Equal School Rights in Boston | p. 279 |
The Negro Race, Self-Government, and the Haitian Revolution | p. 288 |
Liberty for Slaves | p. 305 |
If There is No Struggle There is No Progress | p. 308 |
I Will Sink Or Swim with My Race | p. 313 |
Break Every Yoke and Let the Oppressed Go Free | p. 318 |
Should Colored Men be Subject to the Penalties of the Fugitive | p. 322 |
Why is Slavery Still Rampant | p. 322 |
I Do Not Believe in that Antislavery of Abraham Lincoln | p. 340 |
A Plea for Free Speech | p. 354 |
Let Us Take Up the Sword | p. 357 |
What if the Slaves are Emancipated? | p. 359 |
We Ask for Our Rights | p. 368 |
Lincoln's Colonization Proposal is Anti-Christian | p. 375 |
The Negroes in the United States of America | p. 377 |
Freedom's Joyful Day | p. 381 |
Address to the Youth | p. 384 |
The Moral and Social Aspect of Africa | p. 389 |
The Good Time is at Hand | p. 392 |
The Position and Duties Of The Colored People | p. 397 |
A Tribute to a Fallen Black Soldier | p. 407 |
The Mission of the War | p. 410 |
Give Us Equal Pay and We Will Go to War | p. 426 |
Let the Monster Perish | p. 432 |
Colored Men Standing in the Way of Their Own Race | p. 443 |
An Appeal for Aid to the Freedmen | p. 452 |
Deliver Us From Such a Moses | p. 454 |
We Are All Bound Up Together | p. 456 |
These are Revolutionary Times | p. 460 |
Equal Rights for All: Three Speeches | p. 463 |
To My White Fellow Citizens | p. 467 |
Break Up the Plantation System | p. 469 |
Justice Should Recognize No Color | p. 473 |
I Claim the Rights of a Man | p. 475 |
Finish the Good Work of Uniting Colored and White Working Men | p. 483 |
Composite Nation | p. 488 |
Then I Began To Live | p. 503 |
Abolish Separate Schools | p. 506 |
The Ku Klux of the North | p. 512 |
The Right of Women to Vote | p. 514 |
A Plea in Behalf of the Cuban Revolution | p. 517 |
The Civil Rights Bill | p. 520 |
Equality Before the Law | p. 536 |
The Civil Rights Bill | p. 549 |
The Great Problem to Be Solved | p. 564 |
Oration in Memory of Abraham Lincoln | p. 567 |
The Sioux's Revenge | p. 577 |
How Long? How Long, O Heaven? | p. 579 |
Socialism: The Remedy for the Evils of Society | p. 580 |
The Destined Superiority of the Negro | p. 589 |
Migration is the Only Remedy for Our Wrongs | p. 599 |
Race Unity | p. 603 |
These Evils Call Loudly for Redress | p. 613 |
Negro Education - Its Help and Hindrances | p. 623 |
The Stone Cut Out of the Mountain | p. 634 |
Reasons for a New Political Party | p. 640 |
The Present Relations of Labor and Capital | p. 642 |
How Shall We Make the Women of Our Race Stronger? | p. 645 |
Introduction of Master Workman Powderly | p. 652 |
I Am An Anarchist | p. 655 |
Mob Violence | p. 660 |
How Shall We Get Our Rights? | p. 676 |
Importance of Race Pride | p. 680 |
Woman Suffrage | p. 687 |
I Denounce the So-Called Emancipation as a Stupendous Fraud | p. 693 |
Organized Resistence is Our Best Remedy | p. 707 |
National Perils | p. 708 |
It Is Time to Call a Halt | p. 713 |
Harvard Class Day Oration | p. 728 |
Education and the Problem | p. 734 |
The Intellectual Progress of the Colored Women of the United States Since the Emancipation Proclamation | p. 761 |
Women's Cause is One and Universal | p. 772 |
Justice or Emigration Should be Our Watchword | p. 775 |
The Ethics Of The Hawaiian Question | p. 790 |
Address to the First National Conference of Colored Women | p. 797 |
Atlanta Exposition Address | p. 800 |
A Plea Against The Disfranchisement Of the Negro | p. 805 |
The Awakening Of The Afro-American Woman | p. 834 |
The Awakening of the Afro-American Woman | p. 834 |
The Attitude of the American Mind Toward the Negro Intellect | p. 846 |
The Functions of the Negro Scholar | p. 857 |
Remarks To President Mckinley | p. 861 |
We Must Have A Cleaner ""Social Morality"" | p. 863 |
The Cancer of Race Prejudice | p. 868 |
The Negro Will Never Acquiesce as Long as He Lives | p. 872 |
The Willmington Massacre | p. 875 |
The Fallacy of Industrial Education as the Solution Of the Race Problem | p. 878 |
Some Facts About Southern Lynchings | p. 882 |
The Burden of the Educated Colored Woman | p. 885 |
The State of the Country from a Black Man's Point of View | p. 890 |
My Mother as I Recall Her | p. 897 |
To the Nations of the World | p. 905 |
Index of Speeches by Author | p. 909 |
Subject Index | p. 913 |
About the Editors | p. 926 |
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