Refine Search

Newspaper

Reynolds's Newspaper

Countries

Place

London, London, England

Access Type

40

Type

40

Public Tags

More details

Reynolds's Newspaper

REVIEWS OF BOOKS

... from i. What a fise- piolous pyople I SPCLckL MmEro=R OF TinE ATNT-SLAVERY CON- MRianCE IN PARIS. 27, Actv Broad-strett-1-his ls a most inteyesting and ?? account of the Parit Anti-Slavery Conference of 1867. It is &rawn up by the able and indefatigable ...

REVIEWS OF BOOKS

... 1 With the greatest composare, aid when asked what re-., e-wks he-had to make, replied- Gentlemen, make an the of slavery, or slavery wil make n end of eu.; The daughter of the Governor of Virginia begged for~ his life( 'pnher knees, but mercy with ...

REVIEWS OF BOOKS

... of Poerturgal ; and the late Portaria of that monarch at once placee his Msjesty foremosot among the advocates of slavery. Until slavery is entirety abolished in the African dominions of Don Pedro the Fifth the stave-trade soul fteurish, while outraged ...

REVIEWS OF BOOKS

... muoh attached to the family, and never to have thought of leaving them. These axe the tbings which make one hopeful about slavery in Brazil; emancipation is considered there a subject to be discussed, legislated upon, adopted ultiMately, and it seems no ...

PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS

... war. Four years elapse, and we find the two coiirades messmates on board the Terrible, then about attacking that hot-bed of slavery, Algiers. They are made pri- soners by the AlIgerines, and condemned to death, but the executioner deputed to decapitate them ...

REVIEWS OF BOOKS

... generally a methodism degraded almost to foliehIsm. Blie is naturally a low orderofe ceing, and slavery keeps him so. I do not think, with allit.s faulte, that slavery lowers the American negrro; but It certainly prevents him ever wishirg to be a nobler creature ...

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 [ill]

... ~ LIT1BARk iOZLLAZA. SOUIHEBN SLAVErY.-Thldti of the Southern slave is not stationary, but pr ve A lisrated. Every cerfort he of his smves is aene -ore or less, by his derogh t, s h does Ii theoutetof iofe;bhit, e able hoase6 for himself, the ibu ok builds ...

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 ...

REVIEWS OF BOOKS

... resist the overweeaicg influnceuiof the honse of Lowther. Tho chief tpo e'tvelt on in his address were ;the abolition of slavery,'the total rermoval of reli- gious disabilities, retrenoLimnoa± in the public expendi- ture, end a redaction within moderate ...

REVIEWS OF BOOKS

... be fulfilled. FPszo'eS MAGAzu Parker, Skra.-- Fraser's for February contains a remarkable article entitled Negroes aud Slavery In the United States. The author hao strong Southern, or slave-holding prolivities, and paints that cpeculirInstitution with ...

LITERARY MISCELLANEA

... power.-di es' Lives ofthc £eeiginsera. COLUMBA'S COURSE-OLUMBt&' OUR& sr D. iWM Colmnbial deeply chastened land, Through slavery's accursed band, Regenerate, * thoa might'st yet commsand A great and lasting destiny I With Constitution, high and tree, ...