LITERARY MISCELLANEA

... where he cannot be replaced except at considerable expense. This is one thing which peculiarly aggravates the do- mestic slavery of Mozambique, viz., the facilitywith which the negro is replaced. To keep them in subjection, every opportunity is seized ...

LITERARY MISCELLANEA

... to ho allowed to wear a European hat and coat, and to f ien off the blade turban, which is their sign of degradation I aed slavery. The Mogador Jewesses are not very s tri L to faith. They will marry any well-to'do Christian geutlo- man who should make ...

LITERATURE

... E. ; its altitude is 3,750 ft. above the sea level. in The chapter on slavery contains much that wi fo excite serious debate upon the subject. It shows he that the horrors of slavery are not seen in East ail Africa. The property is well fed and little ...

LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART

... very well written is full of incident, and very often of adventure too. He considers the French free labour system merely slavery under a milder name, and looks for the extinction of the evil to slow and gradual changes rather than bold and repressive ...

LITERATURE

... comparison with those qualities she; , is exhibiting now, that she has just emlerge1d from Y I that long night of degradation and slavery ? In the history of the Rothschild of his time, Strozzi, the great Florentine banker-who flourished about the I period we ...

LITERARY EXTRACTS

... silve1ry peal, that shall shout into the world's ear that another Eve and another Adam are'in another Paradise.-Ladies' Treairy. SLAVERY AND METHODIoTS.-In South Carolina a formal remonstrance, signed by over three hundred and fifty of the leading planters and ...

LITERARY REPORT

... pointedly written. Those who are interested in the question of slavery will derive gratification from a perusal of ?? a Thousand Adtles Jor Freedom; or, the E'scape of Wihllam and Ellen Craft from Slavery. (London : Tweedie) The title of this little wvrk suliliiently ...

LITERATURE

... of a most attractive kind. It shows the difficulties and hardships men-of-war's-men have to endure for the suppression of slavery, and exhibits the cunning of the sla-vedcclers to rctain the slaves, and lead the English into snaxes and traps for their ...

LITERATURE

... most intel i- ligible form, the statutory efforts of Lord Brougham in 11 putting down the slave trade and the institution of slavery y itself, so far nasthe might of Great Britain could inflcence it those blessed results; we witness his labours in behalf ...

Literary Notices

... Sbemrde S !,The same ,,;.ecountry-i6 opee.;niore a'wake -awvake to the eon, in dition of ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ cn-11 r dindsn of negro slavery; the, sme adtgnetion hb kincile0 in the bosom of . the- ssame people: the qi ra asmde-'cloud is gatberibg- 'that sianibniated ...

REVIEWS

... hereditarry princess is tlrat of' Electoral Ilessia, who is 70; ?? yvalrgest is that of Saxe- Meiningen, wiro is only 20. Slavery is sinful in its origir, sinful in its effects, sinrful in its continuratrce, inld shifnil cternally.-1?ep. ?? Anrlrew Tlronson ...