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Place

Dublin, Dublin, Republic of Ireland

Access Type

18

Type

18

Public Tags

FASHION AND VARIETIES,

... Prussian I government and the Archbishop of Posen. It was not because of the Wolverine sloop of war being ordered from the Malta station to the coast of Africa to cruise after slaves that the Ron. Captain Howard, brother 5 of Lord Morpeth, resigned the command ...

LITERATURE

... dignities in war. as well as peace, they knew how to turn all the opportunities of conquest to the best advantage. It became a prevailing, and not ineffective feeling, with great leaders, from a very early period, de- cidedly during the Punic wars, that public ...

LITERATURE

... and cupidity embodied in another form xr of hypocrisy. Ile says Mr. HuLms vould have our West India merchants send ships to Africa to purchase cargoes of slaves (who must necessarily be kidnapped and torn away from their homes, and kidnapped to furnish ...

FASHIONS AND VARIETIES

... French princes, r Joinville and Nemours, to take a tour into Germany, after i, the return of the latter from the sent of war in Africa, t ARRIVALS AT THE SISELSOULTNE HOTEL, STEPHEN5S a GREI44.-The Very Rev. the Dear, of Down, Mr., Mrs. arid the Misses Madden ...

LITERARY NOTICES

... must excite great public curiosity in' every quarter of the globe.-'2. Th'iheairiqY: of Lotndot- derry's Narrative of the late War in Gcrtna/anl 1'atlCe. forming the only well authenticated account wve have of the spirit-stirring scenes titat preceded the ...

LITERATURE

... stirring life in the service of Spain, Having arrived in that country only after the close of the war, after the treaty of Bergara, he carried his sword into Africa, and entered as a volunteer into the Foreign Legion, in the service of France in that region ...

THE FASHIONABLE WORLD

... Algiers, to be assembled in the island of Majorea; also for the revictuallirig of osir ships in tlb ports nearest the coast of Africa. Some persons, who gr they are well informed, pretend that the assembling of our livision in the Balearic Islands before ...

LITERATURE

... beread with avidity. The structure of the isthmus of Suez is such as to have induced a great many of the ancients to think that Africa wae once an iWand. Long valleys, with saltish pools at the bottom, run -aioig the isthmus between the two seas, and spread ...

THE FASHIONABLE WORLD

... Toulon of 68 ships of war (including twelve sail of the line, and 20 frigates): its land force amounted 'to 37,577 men, and 4,000 horse. The first division left Totdoin- on the 25th of May; on the .29th it reached the coast of Africa.'- On the 30th-and ...

SPIRIT OF THE JOURNALS

... oracle of the Tory land of Co- gi cagne winds up a long tirade on the gradual ex- 't tension of the French empire in Northern Africa, tI by the pithy exclamation, So much for Whig dex- ai terity and ?? for ever !- Now, te would it not have been equally ...

REPEAL DICTIONARY

... be one of the most productive in the world. Mahometanism, how- ever, withers its industry. The soil is the most fertile in Africa-yielding in abundance all kinds of corn and fruit, having the most valuable forest trees-producing hemp, cotton, and whatever ...

THE FASHIONABLE WORLD

... ady Nl'Naughten off the Cape. '1he i1l Wl 00rzsideted one of tlte finest of its species, and was tired i th~e interior of Africa, NVitls two others, one of which . sia a preseit to tbe Paca of Egypt, thle second to Con- e eitii opl', tbr the Sultan. ...