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THE THEATRICAL EXAMINER

... by his btte eoir who overhears it, one Jfalgenio; is watched over and protected by a Greek girl whom he has rescued from slavery, Haydke; when he is going to murder himself in the last scene, hears suddenly of the more opportune murder of Malgenio; and ...

LITERATURE

... every European country are those in which nothing but coined money vwas appreciated. Those periods are marked by poverty, slavery, and degradation on the part of the people, and by tyranny, unthrift, and crimes of the most heinous description on the part ...

LITERATURE

... tatii'ti' oif &Oiio of thle miost important island-, pfiio 'h ?? esp eciahlly anid an amaiple 1000011 t of the transition fromn slavery to apprenti e'-hip, in ?? lie him iself had anl important part to per - formi. Ini discussing the quecations whicli nri'e ...

FACTS, FANCIES, AND FICTIONS

... In its loveliness more than this struggle is worth, For dear to each heart is its evergreen sod, Where the footsteps of slavery never have trod. And yet the proud foemen again are prepar'd To attempt what ambition so often has dar'd- Ignobly to bind ...

LITERATURE

... world, who have so long -dreaded the power of the Iligsil 13 ment, and admired its philanthropy in broakinig the ell'isi slavery, and its zeal in sending missionaries to barbarous eln.' tell the glory of the Saviour's love, contemplate the Britisi, isl ...

Published: Sunday 16 January 1842
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 3656 | Page: 6 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

MELOLOGUE

... ear, o' Hme' !'who made all harmon', 'T han tie blest 61u'l of fetters breaking, And tle fiat hyrmn that man wakinig;- From Slavery s climber, ?? to l ie ty, (rAs-AiSi iATaIOT 5 SOXG;) Hark! frotn Spain;, disrant Spain: - ursts the hold enditusiast strain'- ...

LITERATURE

... Eyorts Made 4y the British Governrnaent eFr its Bzitinctio,0 . By JAXeS BANDINISL, Esq., Foreign Office, [Longman and Co. Slavery and the slave trade the results of the evili passions of mankind, which have appeared in every age of the world. At the beginning ...

LITERARY SCRAPS

... LITERARY SCRAPS. GOOD GovERNMENT.-Poverty is, after all, the great badge, the never-failing badge of slavery. Bones and rags are the true marks of the real slave. What is the object of govern- ment? To cause men to live happily, which canmotbe without ...

FINE ARTS

... beat kneres, an lfncestitu&, ate, mourfiifu'iy eloquent, in prts'e of the Artist, and fort' -rlrtems of lorpg-endured slavery . S- i A; 1t~eneas ?? h; ckzd .i9 Of PaWO'19 'r DqISIAV hac every muscle of hiS finely proportioned itnbs braced by friendship ...

THE MIRROR OF FASHION

... Lodoliska. id COVENT.GARDEN THEATRE.-This Evening dwill be presented, a new Opera, called NATIVE LAND, or, The Re- r, turn from Slavery.. Principal Characters-Mr. Sinclair, Mr. W. Far- . ren, Mr.Ceoper, Mlr. arcett, Miss Paton, Sliss Beaumont, Silss st Love ...

THE MIRROR OF FASHION

... CO VENT- GARDE)lN 'f 'lilA'.tRE .To-mollOW will be presented, a new Opera, called NATIVEs LANDp; ti^.e 00t tnrnl,fronsl Slavery. Friseipali Clharactere-Dlr. Shieloit, D r- t gge raen, 31r. Casper. Dlr. Fosceitt, Bliss lrtttn. ' Diss BeamS00 , A Love ...

THE ABORIGINAL TRIBES OF NORTH AMERICA

... then at- tacked by a neighbouring hostile tribe, who took pos. session of it, reducing the wretched handful of survivors to slavery. These conquerors, again, were assailed by the warlike tribes of the Siouxes (well known to the readers of CooPER'S romances ...