LITERATURE

... ety had been so completely v brought under the influence of the Pro-Slavery party Ia its I -management, that the Word of God was made void -in its *publications in the mat-ter of slavery. They kept back. lbse -whole couinsel of God on -this fearf-al evil ...

POETRY

... hast the power no tyrants know- The powei that justice can bestow; Then lay the bloody despot low, And buist the bonds of slavery! Tie not dismayed if fortune frown; '1hils shalt thou keep the tyrant down! On! on! and thon thy work shalt crown Amid the ...

LITERARY REPORT

... it may comfort the editor under any It criticism which may be levelled against his work, h Slavery Doomed-by F,%EDERICK MILNE EDGE 0 -is an essay on slavery in the United States, with ethe object of showing that the results of free and slave labour must ...

LITERATURE

... line of fair literary advocacy of a political cause. Mr. Charles Buxton has a genuine hereditary right to contend against slavery; but on other questions likewise, bott in parliament and out of it, his public career as an active liberal has been commenced ...

POETRY

... congeals when cold, But which your silly dupes adore. Ye linow how It3ly ha6 bcen, Thank most Yuurselves, for weary years, of slavery a mournful scene- A wretceied land of blood and tears. 11cr best blood ne'er had ceased to drip, lfer teals continued still ...

PICKINGS FROM PUNCH

... congeals when cold, But which your silly dupes adore. Ye know how Italy has been, Thank most yourselves, for weary years, Of slavery a mournful scene- A wretched land of blood and tears, Her best blood ne'er had ceased to dtrip, Her tears continued still ...

Pickings from Panch

... mend the linen of forlorn old bachelors.m, THE BLACKEST HY0iootisy.-merioa pretending to be a land of Freedom so long as slavery exists in it-l; THE PLAY'S -TRE TrJG.-.f Ji work and no pl, makes John a dull bo, as Mr. Bull remarked to the languid ...

Borrowed Cristes

... mark of affection by his bro- ther.' EASILY ANmwaEnD.-Among the Romans the gife of a ring was a badge of liberation from slavery. Married people can best explain whether it is so amongst the mo- derns. : WOMAN'S EmrxnE.-The apire S&as of New York prettily ...

LITERATURE

... pro- le venting the purchase by the tribe of Boers of Por- tl tuguese territory. The good faith of Portugal, in the anti-slavery treaty, is regarded by Mr. M'Leod it with but slight respect In the following briskly fe told incident of his voyage along ...

ST. JAMES'S HALL

... w ich ier f't; r! b * 5 ;t tralto voice had made, by singing. n.t Ti'I el n. y Boy,' ais announced, but the Jiiic-i ' - o slavery ditty, Sons of l-rt dotlt, hwar lilt' 1M. Gassier's big, manly voheit tlol a-il In III; ronn *uit Itse, being encored f.:r ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... when, or in what manner, slavery is to end, but, if the owners of slaves were so disposed, it appears to me that there would he no difficulty whatever, politically, financially, or socially, in diminishing the evil of slavery, and in pre- paring the way ...