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Daily News (London)

GOVERNMENT SCHEME OF EDUCATION

... system in France, and it is regarded the beet bulwark of freedom in the United States of America. 2fl. The measure is essentially the same that which has been established in the United States, where it is supported by the cherished convictions of all r.'ligious ...

LITERATURE

... frequent and cordial references to that accomplished b person in the correspondence now given to the world. M Unlike the leading Irishmen of the last and present fu generation-Grattan, Plunkett, and O'Connell-the m brilliant Irish orator Curran was fortunate ...

LITERATURE

... keep the Bible cut of everjbody's way, and make people easy about their sins: and he is positive that no one above a poor Irishmen, can fail to see through such ronsense. Few even of educated Engilihmen have any suspicion of the depth and solidity of ...

LITERATURE

... , has invested, perhaps all t tliings consiAcred, the most peaceable part of her t Majestv's dominions; a province of the United King- } dom, not 24 hours' journey from this metropolis. As t regards life and property, we have no hesitation in saying that ...

LITERATURE

... writers remain (and it is odd that the literary ?? of Ireland, whether. in farce or romance, have almost invariably been & Irishmen), who, remembering the success of the class a of novels in the production of which Griffin, Lady I- Morgan, and Banim obtained ...

LITERATURE

... any pnarticalar criticism of the literary merits of the Rebels of Glenfawn, but merely mention that it treats of the United Irishmen, Lord Edward Fitz- gerald, Reynolds the informer, and the battle of Vinegar-h l, all subjects which have over and over ...

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 ...

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

... commissioner of dreenwich Hospital Erst, and so rose gradually. We can see no grounds for the abuse he met with-X from brother Irishmen especially-for taking the course he did. He was faithful to his country in her great and honourable Emancipation struggle; ...

DRAMA

... sail s-i tO speak, more natural, thel t'ist sesu~ili viven. Our Ilra- h, moti~t5 steldom etempt to depict a gsntltmti~ly Irishmen, sothatttor the ces*sof casracteve usually repreoenrrsf Mr. 9DWilliams's brogue iS hettsr than tni~t ol Mr. Hludson, .g which ...

DEPARTMENT OF SCIENCE AND ART

... (Mr. Cowper't)midth nen woild rather seem to imply Uie opiniona ot fthos wno wished to unite art with manufacture, to unite the truthful to the beautiful, and to unite the substantial and the re- fl4ed, (Cheers.) He hoped then that from this meeting in ...