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Pall Mall Gazette

NOTES ON THE BRAZILIAN QUESTION

... on the same subjects in i863. The longer and more interesting part of the Notes refers, no doubt, to the question of slavery in Brazil, and the proposed repeal of the ABERDEEN Act. But even in his chapters on these subjects, as also in those on our ...

SONGS OF THE AMERICAN WAR

... published by Messrs. BoOSEY the first thing that strikes us is the almost entire absence of even allusions to the question of slavery. It is a question which the Southerners on their part cannot afford to regard from a sentimental point of view, and which ...

CAPITAL PUNISHMENT

... prestige which accrues from an apparent identification with the advancing tendencies of the age. As the strong- holds of slavery, and despotism, and persecution have been succes- sively stormed, the remaining forts of Conservatism must fall in a few years ...

PARLIAMENTARY REVIEW

... those hard practical speeches from Lord STANLEY which are so apt to grate upon the feelings of the House, as his remarks on slavery did the other nlight. He had no sympathy with the natives, who could not resist the degeneration which was the tendency of ...

MR. SALA'S DIARY IN AMERICA

... that the secession might after all be only the work of a knot of querulous agitators, and that the root of the agitation was slavery, the feeling here was distinctly against the seceding States, and the few voices raised in their favour could hardly obtain ...

MR. SALA'S DIARY IN AMERICA

... that the secession might after all be only the work of a knot of querulous agitators, and that the root of the agitation was slavery, the feeling here was distinctly against the seceding States, and the few voices raised in their favour could hardly obtain ...

MR. LECKY'S RISE AND INFLUENCE OF RATIONALISM

... Euro~e. By W. E. I-I. Lrci;v, MA.A Two Volumes. (London: Longman and Co.) were the aristocratic influences of the ancient slavery, or the military tendelicies of the feudal era of European civilization. It is clearly confusion to suppose that all influences ...

ENGLAND AS SEEN BY FOREIGNERS

... money, are covered with lead. They are powerful in the field, successful against their enemies, impatient of anything like slavery ; vastly fond of great noises that fill the ear, such as the firing of cannon, drums, and the ringing of bells, so that il ...

RAOUL DE LA CHASTRE

... finds out that the old doctor dissects dead people, or (as he ratherbelieves) lives on human flesh. Of course his new life of slavery is rather biurderl- some, at least it would have been had not his mistress fallen in love vlt, him after a fashion, so far ...

LIFE OF PRESIDENT LINCOLN

... now) that Mr. Lincoln was not an anti-slavery man until the war broke out, 11st be ignorant of the fact that his earliest political battles were foughf .itl Mer. Douglas on that very question. He always held that slavery was a crime, that the Legislature ...

DR. PUSEY'S EIRENICON

... force. The other would be a conquest oi tle soul and spirit. Without this consequence union is mere nonsemise- With it it is slavery of the most ignoble kind. At present the Church of England is no check at all upon our freedom, but think wlat it would be ...

ENGLISH TRAVELLERS AND ITALIAN BRIGANDS.*

... in preserving the lives of n 1 represent part of their personal property, and this, as we are so often told in the case of slavery, is a sufficient guarantee for tolerable treatment It is true that those of the band who had not a share in MIr. y1(j frequently ...