LITERATURE

... ofr that year sent out oin ilplomatic form ir Woodbine Parish as. the representative of Bngland. . At first common dangers united all the states that I 'Iwre parties to the Declarati on of Tucaan. - But, in trauth, it was practically' imposible. tot constitute ...

LITERATURE

... produced anything more exquisite in I the Anglo-Arcadian style. It was just the sort of house a which youthful couples, newly united by holy church, heigh-ho'd for as they passed, and vowed they preferred a thousand times to any castle, hall, or mansion in ...

THE GREAT EXHIBITION OF 1853

... thbeelemnetts 0' hbe a majestic conception-the, ;is yet, uncombined proportions4 'oa cubic work-the disjeccu meetbre, not yet united, of : ,~besottlul architectural ciesation. On yesterday this seeming conusion of malterial-thtis ap- parentiy diserganised ...

GREAT INDUSTRIAL EXHIBITION OF 1853

... available to Irishmen of similar classes to the same extent, it forms part of the de- sign of Mr. Dargan to obtain peculiar facilities for his humble countrymen to witness in the irish metropolis, the products of the skill and ingenuity of the United Kingdom ...

Our Library Table

... ously n15 the state of any partniculair crop -the potato, for instriace, goe thioughiourt the whole of Jielarind.i -l If Irishmen conduct themselves so well in the sta( police, and they are equally estimable as soldiers- Cii si-ely it is in the powier ...

LITERATURE

... language of America were so firmly fixed, that tl no importation from without could change them. E The millions of Germans and Irishmen in the Ame- a. rican continent will be the parents of millions of o Americans all speaking the English language, and c pervaded ...

LITERATURE

... readers of the circulating library, but every page bears the impress of a scholar and a man of genius. Mr.Thackeray, in the United States, is the title of a letter by a gentleman who very appropriately dubs himself John Small, on the gossippitg propensities ...

THE GREAT INDUSTRIAL EXHIBITION OF 1853

... as a great acquisition, by those who not many years ago advocated a total exclusion of all Saxon productions. And again, Irishmen, determined not to c be ' beaten' on their own soil, are exercising a praiseworthy I energy, to which her people have too ...

LITERATURE

... history of the United a Irishmen, of which the shop of Mr. Byrne, an eminent book- I seller, of No. 108, Grafton-streeti was in those days the. scene:- Byrne's shop In Grafton-street was the usual literary ren- t3 dezvous of the United Irishmen, and the publisher ...

HOLIDAY AMUSEMENTS

... of a nobleman who had Ibeen murdered, with the rest of his family, by the brigand troop. Marco ?? dies, and the lovers are united. ?? two Scenes, of which the second and third acts are composed, are as magnificent effects as we have seen on the stage. ...

THE IRISH EXHIBITION COMMITTEE IN LIVERPOOL

... come (applause), because he looked Opon it as the forerunner of that union which ought to exist betoten countries eo clearly united, and he looked to the representatives of great towns fo'r that union to be cemented between then (applause). The Mayor then ...

Caledonian Mercury

... in power, an aecredited ayent of the Whig ; ind Pectite party had made an overture to the Lrish Members, that if they would unite in the overthrow of the Derby Ministry, Ireland would be exempied from the inc Mr E. Ball, one of the members for Cambridgeshire ...