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TO THE FUSTIAN JACKETS, THE BLISTERED HANDS, AND UNSHORN CHINS

... -HANDS, AND UN- SHORN CHIN' DAMN THE FACTORY BELL. Oh for the swords of former tune! Oh for the men that bore them! when, armed for right, theq stood sublime, And tyrants crouched betore them.' - I Tome Mooni. ' Then onward,'the green banner rearing, ...

DRAMA

... e P.C, ,Whallev, Lancashire, did. Manchester; value, 2401.; pat., V. of Whadley; Rev. E. burrow, dec. All Saints P.C., St. John's-wood, Lonldo; pat,, Col, Eyre; Rev. E. Thompson, D.D., prom. NAVAL. . ForTsMrrosr, MARCH 31.-The Fantome, 12, is to be pa ...

THE GREAT EXHIBITION OF 1851

... readiness to assist the working classes to visit the Exhibition. The resolution was agreed to, and Messrs. John Allan, plumber; Charles Fraser, tailor; John Bulloch, brassfounder; Robert Macleod ; Jatnes Hunter, ma- son ; William Murray, overseer, Spring-garden; ...

CURRAN AND HIS CONTEMPORARIES

... i- been lost had not the love of his friend, and a laudable zeal for his memory, induced him to give them to the world. l. John Philpot Curran was born at Newmarket, a l little village in the county of Cork, on the 24th of July, 175O. His parents were ...

Literary Extracts

... parties wentt in- stantly from the house to the field. Curry was %wounded in tise arm. A friend who was present told mne the duel took place in the twilight, and that Grattan said, 1 The gentleman is placed too far offL--I cannot see lint plainly-let htitn ...

Great Protectionist Demonstration IN DRURY-LANE THEATRE

... Burroughes, Mir. John Spurling, the I'on. and Rev. Augustus Duncombe, Sir Charles Blois, B art., Sir 'Thomas Cunningham, Bert., Sir Thomas Hare, Bart., Mr. James Stoddart Douglas, the lion. Ralph Dutton, Captain Heaviside, Mir. John Ellinan, Lord Charles ...

THE GREAT EXHIBITION

... of the Duke's healthy looks. Thus lie describes a th, brace of veteran heroes :--I Wellington and Anglesey were mli sent arm-In-arm, tottesing, staggerinrg, halting, stumbling, en- ISi hieg9 numbering, arid -assisting each other along it wan at once eb ...

THE GREAT EXHIBITION

... down to the river, and in the centre of which the ;* band of the 2nd Life Guards, under the superintendence of eat had Mr. Grattan Cooke, were stationed, and played several )lief of operatic selections in the course of the evening. A regatta t would formed ...

LEICESTERSHIRE

... 151. each, and to pay costs. —John Wilhins and John Foulds, both of Long Whatton, were charged with assaulting Philip Needham, of that place, on the 12th inst., and were fined Is. each and costs, or 14 days imprisonment.— John Watts, of Loughborough, was ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... nt to me. Brave old gentleman-we hope not. Of that same agricultural protection, by the way, Sir Robert can say, as Grattan said of Irish liberty, that he stood by its cradle and followed its hearse-with the not unimportant difference that the funeral ...

DRAMA

... to a Deanery Rural, dio. Chichester. Rev E. Evans, to Garthell Perpetual Curacy, Cardigan- shire; value, 601.; patron, Perpetual Curate of Llandewi- t Brevi. Rev. John Howlin Montserrat, to be Colonial Chaplain at the Gambia. 5 Rev. Clement Moody, to ...