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Belfast, Antrim, Northern Ireland

Access Type

142

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139
3

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A WELCOME TO OUR AMERICAN BROTHERS

... runs, We owln one gloriolrn past; May never feud or faction mnar Our peace, while tinte shall last True luve of Fieclloin, slavery's hate, Fills every Irish heart; 'nited thus to-day we meet, And thus united part. Fling forth Columbia's banner bright, With ...

FAIRS

... )arts of Sicily they arc still worni of such a size to )o convertible into weapons. The earrings were tocieltly badtg9s of slavery, tnid were soldered so hat they could not be removed from the var. Their orm iniicated tile owner of ?? slave. A wvise nian ...

MUSICAL AND DRAMATIC INTELLIGENCE

... unwilling to act. A New York telegram reports the deaths of M'r. Henry B. Stantou and -Mr. Abbey Kelly Forster, prominent anti-slavery agitators. |GaEisNas I ?? Fiance pablisbes some statistics relative to the numnber of Germans iu Paris. It says there are ...

Fashion and Varieties

... Zachary ;Macaulay, the carly t friend anldI associate of \Vilbertbrce, the veteran ?? ill the cause of the abolition of negro slavery. His gran1tmtktlmer was a Pileslevterian clcr-yiala in the Highlands of Scot.lad, atld, we believe, was a nititi'C of the ...

THEATRE ROYAL—THE DANISCHEFFS

... casually interesting to those to whom its national character is not one of its attractions. We are so accustomed to think of slavery as nothing beyond an abstract idea, that we cannot fully realize the degrading conditions of serfdom as it existed in Russia ...

Fashion and Varieties

... As a matter of personal comfort, the Turkish dress must be most agreeable, in addition to i its- beauty. During an 'anti-slavery cdnvouation'at Syracuse, again, Mrs. Burleigh and the two Misses f Burleigh, the wife and' daugliters of the poet Burleigh ...

REVIEWS

... Ali! if we had but a dictionary of wsat %we are ignorant of! The better a wvonian obeys the. surer she is to ?? Smith. Slavery is a system made up of every crime that treachery. crtuelty, and murder can invent-Rev. Rowland Hill. It costs a great. deal ...

Fashion and Varieties

... who does not learn by qx- perience. A ship should not be made to depend on one anchor, nor life on one hope, There is no slavery so hard, so degrading, so miser- able, so loathsome, as that of intemperance. Woman's love is a good deal like camomile-the ...

AMATEUR OPERA IN THE ULSTER MINOR HALL

... United States before the proclamsatiou of their freedom by President Abraham Lincoln. and how he esoaped from the tbneldom of slavery-a sk5e* which brought to recollectioae some of the fines5 passages in Mrs. Stowe's well-known work-vere listened to with intense ...

FASHION AND VARIETIES

... beell ill tle Crinea with his reginlnlt, thle 17th Foot, for the last twelvc months, sheliiing all the halrdshlops allt1 slavery of a campaign ?? in Severity. Throngh tie kind ilt.rposition of Provihlelleo lie hns escaped in- jury except it ?? wound received ...

Fashion and Varieties

... between the two countries. INTiE:RSTINr SEMrPLCITY.- I say, mamma! Well, my pet? Was Uncle Tom the husband of anti- slavery? Tut, nonsense, child! Tell Jane to put you to bed. A barrister observed to a learned brother in court that he thought ...

THEATRE ROYAL

... pathetic rendering of 2oe, who, after being carefully, and even elegangtly, trained, is exposed to the rude vicissitudes of slavery. M iss M. A. Bellair was an admirable Dora Sunnyside-a good-hearted belle, who must : have wrought unonscious rain among her ...