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London, London, England

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ODE TO THE TAX YEAR, OR 5th OF APRIL

... pain r And freeborn Britons vainly groan With pangs unfelt before- tipied and unknown NVhen first thy Sire, to send on earth Slavery-his darling child ! design'd, To thee he gave the hellish birth, And bade to bend a Nation's mind.- Accutrs sl weight ! thy ...

THE MIRROR OF FASHION

... was heard the battle-fray, .hen saok pate l'ruslasq transient ray Or whep in .Austria'; evil (lay, She purchasel peace by slavery ? Fcr this was frgeg Ilelvetia's cliviH 'Jhe hoof (i war improssed on Spahn And wrougit the nsmnderous deedls whirlh stain ...

CATALOGUE RAISONNEE OF THE PICTURES IN THE LATE EXHIBITION OF THE BRITISH INSTITUTION

... rATVIOT.': Dearest land of my fathers ! arouse from yours slumber ! Again withs the clamour of arms fill the vale! What-shall slavery stili gloom the sad hours we now number Shall terror unnerve us-when tyrants prevail . Forbid it, thou GOD we- ne'erecease ...

FINE ARTS

... agaiist his captors, altd not admire the Painter s Inoral art, and not acnkowvtedne the value of Freedoni or feel hatred to slavery ; it must be tle frozein in soul h wo would not feel to tibe heart's core the expression of tenderne.ss in his sister, as ...

LITERARY NOTICES

... himiself wl ith Chateau- briand) had better go over together to Ferdinand. Spain is the only place for tlei ; the country of slavery and po- ery; the country of sound morality and religion of legi- timate kings and loval suiljects! Tltere is only one objec- ...

THE MIRROR OF FASHION

... joy occasioned by the bringing to reuson a ferocious Government. anl destroying for ever the horrid system ofchristian slavery, to honour~iini antl his om. n T pinions ini arms, as instruments in eleffing the ?? par- L poass of that A lmighty Power ...

THE MIRROR OF FASHION

... the assumed name of Alkmnar, and who vhon fron Clifton the money he had procured to emancipate Zelinda and tier Child frocm slavery. Clifton arrives at Surinam while it is in the possession of the English, and finds the settlement endangered by the Negroe ...

LITERARY NOTICES

... Iilling to become the pro- perty of one man: for not howing their necks patiently and tankfully tp the doctrirne of perpetual slavery b3 the graepe of Clod; for not haiiin- the crested monster, as it strode on to a twice-t'rfeited throne throunh yeirs of de- ...

ORIGINAL POETRY

... tlhe eaviols night- They know that never joy illumed my brow Tnlirtked with hope that thou ?? free This xwo6ld from its dark slavery, That thou-O awfol LOVELINESS, Wouldst give whate'er Lhese words cannot express* The day becomes more solemn and sererie When ...

LITERARY NOTICES

... Mr. Sontihley next caives 11S his snecedrienum to the doe- trine of Legitimary and a preciouspiece of qiuackery it is: Slavery has lonig ceased to be tolerable in Europe: t1he reniains , of feildal olnpression are disappearing even in tiose, cotntries ...

THEATRE ROYAL, DRURY-LANE

... and triumph in-the i on errors of the misled. Even in the land of freedom, .ded countless multitudes prefer the chains of slavery to the and blessings of independ.tnce love to yoke themselves to i moy tbe car, strive to smother the fire of patriotism ...

LITERARY NOTICES

... iu ch snemn, rb proelaiairheir worship. El'ery fresh lover of a great poet, or of NATUREi iga 'pro- SelYte From trusting slavery. It, is the want of wi.sdonn !lnd of a wis.e enthjusiasm, which makes the world whet it i- Men have long etough admited foolish ...