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Daily News (London)

LITERATURE

... poorest want of the moment, enrolls the disciple in a com- a monwealth spread through all ages and both worlds? What- o ever socialistic tendency may be diffused through the English mind is not unlikely, in spite of a promise diametricallyl opposite, to turn ...

FINE ARTS

... lationary storm which raged in France in 1848 drove * many peacefhl artists, as well as kings, ministers, tri- r buincst and socialists of state,. for refuge to our coun- P .try; aud amongst theformqr was Mqns..Louis Marvy, o ,a friend of the. writer, who ...

LITERATURE

... enter into a discussion of its merits as a history, even if we felt disposed to ?? examination andfevfutatioii of M. Blanc's socialist principles, which in England in 1832 few will be disposed to accept. As a general history, adopted to the requirements of ...

LITERATURE

... D.ibats, also exists, in the tone of its theatrical E feuilgeton; while the Presse, which has Girardin, c a repubc and a socialist, for.its political editor, a h-frits wii sr. ho-falls .1 :downi - regelaily. once ;a 'wn~ik~ eforo the- id6I o6f I romanticism ...

LITERATURE

... economy. This change in the old method is, doubtless, partly owing to the new features in the controversy introduced by socialist writers. It has been found impossible to argue questions in politico-economical science apart from the influences of politics ...

LITERATURE

... reader will not fail to be sttuck with the pecu- liarity to which we have alluded. The key note of the wotk is a nowerfutl socialistic yearning for thel advent ota tine in which the difficulties of social life shall vanish before the progressive development ...

THE PARIS UNIVERSAL EXHIBITION

... one hundred a lshares. Sir David Brewster truly said in 1850 :-D (In France) the soldier as well as the citizen-the c t socialist, the republican, and the royalist- I Iall look up to the National Institute as a mightyt obelisk erected to science, to be ...

LITERATURE

... or that we give that clever and estimable but rather eccentric body of men to whom Mr. Mansfield belonged-the Christian Socialists-credit for being less sus- ceptible than others of the illusions to which near intimacy, and identity of sentiment, and ...

LITERATURE

... of its principal figure, R~obespierre; and in so doinig, specially to connect the aims and ideas of the latter 'with the socialist opinions 'which have sfince gained the ascendancy in the republican ranks, and of which M. Blanc is one o f the ablest expounders ...

LITERATURE

... NOVELS. Fair Oaks. By MIAX LYLE. Saunders and Otley. We have had philosophuical, theological, political, historical, and socialist novels; but it was reserved to the writer of I Fair Oaks to produce a medical novel. The intention of the work is to inculcate ...

LITERATURE

... French revolution of 1830 to take a >an active part in politics. At that time, also, he i -perused with great ardour the socialist theories of f ) Fourier, St. Simon, and Baboeuf. We find him in a 1 1832, but 24 years of age, editor of the Progresso, ...

LITERATURE

... disappeared. It is true that they are not ff rooted out, but only kept in check-the one by the In police, the other by the semi-socialist devices of the | government. But external decency, and comfort I artificially produced, are better than scenes which 01 shook ...