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REVIEWS

... career. If we would particu- Iarise any passage, we take the following. Speaking of slavery, the author truly inquires- ''What have we gained By our encouragement of slavery? We see war's devastations, even now; The smoking towns, the groaning battle-fields ...

THE QUARTETTE CONCERTS

... .Ah4 ic wag r't to inttifNQ writ Ii slavery in tle slave states3 bui not to allow it lo extend ; whilst the Democratic puity on the other hand' would extend slavery. The senhll rn man believed honestly that slavery was right ; and it certiiinly loas a ...

Literary Notices

... Indies and American Slavery is very clear and very able, although some of the writer's conclusions on the slavery question may be disputed. He writes calmly, and without the wild enthusiasm of the fools who would destroy not only slavery, but with it the ...

POETRY

... hast the power no tyrants know- The powei that justice can bestow; Then lay the bloody despot low, And buist the bonds of slavery! Tie not dismayed if fortune frown; '1hils shalt thou keep the tyrant down! On! on! and thon thy work shalt crown Amid the ...

LITERATURE

... of the English, Irish t( and Scotch press. An elaborate article on Slavery and c' the War in America is very favourable to the North a and proportionately adverse to the South. Slavery is the b greatest crime ever committed by man against his fellow. tl ...

REVIEW

... leaving Livingstone meditating on this high resolve, the poet indulges in reflections on the heart-hardening effects of slavery; protests against The Solemn Arguments of Selfishness, and forcibly exclaims that klavery, sad to say, I has corrupted ...

POETRY

... congeals when cold, But which your silly dupes adore. Ye linow how It3ly ha6 bcen, Thank most Yuurselves, for weary years, of slavery a mournful scene- A wretceied land of blood and tears. 11cr best blood ne'er had ceased to drip, lfer teals continued still ...

LITERARY NOTICES

... :hsti-.ctive account of the .I'tulra; Iresonrees of Akiieriza. its people, instltil- tions. ai ii itw;, Iwit]h Ilu;c.s of slavery andl the late w:I nlutes .f a' e! throlunh the Unit;d States Can l inada, besidles a laige amloutt of valuable ?? of a rel ...

LITERATURE, ART, &c

... may be serv- tr ,ing.-Arzy cnd ?? Gczertc. fr f VENDEL PEIILIoIPS AND JzFFrRsOx DAIS.-At a ci crowded meeting of the Anti-Slavery Society, held m at the Cowper Institution, New York, on the 12th, fi, I Mr. Theodore Tilton, a gentleman connected with ft ...

THEATRE ROYAL

... Count, and than gives way to her afectioe and accepts him for her husband. 'Westcraft nahee a declaration of the Count's slavery, has him Brosted, and brought to the Market-place, where he means to Perchase him; and so punish the lady frher caprice and ...

Court and Fashion

... to let them work or not, as they may-- think proper. - If they were as willing to work as the white man, there would be no slavery now in any Southern State.- New York Heiald. Tun SQUABLES IN. TMlE LonDs,-Tho Econoinist says:- The charge and counter-charge ...

Literary Notices

... with (iirct 1'.it un by wlhich lheir frecdom, is guaralNted. Are, to the. nhlier of 9o0no- thing like ten thousand, hc pt in slavery bv the ]ra- 'iiain Government a series ot' eifnls of leho Briuleb ijegatiou froin Sir tamnes Hadls-on time to Mr. Christie's ...