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Examiner, The

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The Examiner

ORIGINAL POETRY

... dweflinig: let each give his mite, Tilljlike Babel tile new Royal dome lhas arisen; Let beggars and Helots their pittance unite, Add a Palace bestow for a Poor-house and Prisone, * * S * * * S * 7 '7 47 * 4* * 4* * * * * 4* * i} ?? the tables be crowded ...

LITERARY NOTICES

... it universally applied alike to Irishmen, Englishmen, and Scotchmen, and secured by the only means by which it can be practically established, that is, by means of a FvAi AND EQUAL REPRaEtBsrAT[ON of HE POPLE of the United Kingdom in the Commons House of ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... at issue between the Irish Education Coin- nimtsioners and their assailants ; we take the remarks upon the atluantages of uniting the children of different sects -in the same school. Mr WyVvse says- If religious and moral teaching could he strictly confined ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... afterwards included among the more formidable newspaper extracts, submitted to parliament in proof of the designs of the united Irishmen. Thisletter, on its appearance, he read out to his whole family from the chimney corner, as his custom was with the chief ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... THE LITERARY EXAMINER. The United Irishmen, their Lines and Times. By R. R. Madden, M.D. Two vols. Madden and Co. The feeling which suggested this work, and its discreet tone, is to be inferred from a sensible re- mark in the preface. We gather from this ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... together, marry them in fact, and you have pre- pared the most wretched household on earth. The deep and the beautiful may unite themselves, since these have as necessary a connexion as root and flower; it is the most Olorious union that is found in life ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... agent to three or four Tory landlords Many of the descendants of the United Irishmen are urs Tories in politics. h de, The fact here stated, that many of t e scendants of the United Irishmen have become ultra-Tories, does not appear to us very surprisdz'' ...

THE O'CONNELL BANQUET

... masses of the middle classes, and the better part of the higher classes, in England, which teaches me that we were born to be united in affection and in interest-born to be combined against the world, and that we have no enemies but those who are enemies ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... many more were consumed. With an ex- travagant confidence in his own judgment, even on points which he had never studied, he united no portion of steadi- ness or constancy. His purposes were formed and aban- doned with a levity which accorded little with ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... bombazine. 'Two young Irishmen, my dear.' 'Two Irishmen ' exclaimed the lady thus affection- ately addressed, moved as much as it was possible to move so inert a mass, for nothing ruffled that did not frighten her. 'Two Irishmen ! what shall we do ?-what ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... Illustrations. By Nathaniel Armstrong Wells. Bentley. Amid every kind of dispute and difference on every other point, Spain unites all her critics and travellers in admiration of her Pictureseque AInti- qsities. The subject of tlis book, therefore, is ex ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... THE LITERARY EXAMINER. The United Irishmen, their Lives and Times. By R. R. Madden, M.D. Third Series. Three vols. Dublin: Duffy. This is not a good book. It is scarcely matter for regret that it is not. The subject neither deserves nor would admit of ...