THE ORLEANIST PRINCES AND THE AMERICAN ARMY

... which they serve ! The cause, no one can doubt, is good. Although they do not proclaim very loudly as yet, the abolition of slavery is at the bottom of the quarrel which arms the volunteers of tho North. is a war in which humanity itself is concerned. Besides ...

Poetry

... your eapti'e3' chains, And yet -escape the wrath of God and its enduring pains. b00b ealnoe shall be ?? spirit's peace when slavery Is no mere I 'Thou shalt gl.ory in the dancing waves as they ki'ss th pbbled shore' amon The Ivinds shaall glad your patriot ...

I-OEI) BKoroHAM AND thk Noktil—Lord Brougham is very anxious, now that the North has succeeded, ti> disavow all ..

... sentiments. In the House of Lords, on Monday, he said the conduct of the United Government had btt'u perfect upon the subject of slavery, and was astonished at the utterly groundless reports which injudicious friends of the Union had propagated of him, if had ...

LITERATURE

... progress of slavery in the United States, a subject upou which people generally have need to be better informed. The author's speculations, penned before the present war began, as to the probable course of events there as bearing upon the slavery difficulty ...

POETRY

... POETRY. II COUNSEL TO THE AMERICANS. Abolish slavery I -Well I By multitudinous murdering of brotherm Outrage and tyranny beyond all others, By sword and flame, by recklessness and ravage, By au that marks the fiend or moves the savage f There,-tbese ...

THE FALL OF ADAM

... men ! la, ha, the traifle O ! - . Adam brdggiu' each U.P., Malill feed sic chids as godly Lee 2 Else wvear bondms' and slaverie-l Ha, Iha, the traitor 0 1 Adama laughs now at DiMsentj Ha, ha, the traitor 0 ! Thintiks the tax as just as rent! I1a ...

Poetry

... to the hungry, while thy hsnds undo The yoke, and give th' oppressed their due: This Is God's fast. To loose the bands of slavery and wrong By tyrants east To bring Iato thine house the outeast throng, And tune t'be widow's sorrowing heart to song: This ...

THE POETRY OF THE LASH

... argument might be' pushed a step far-. ther :-What £iterature has the South, dise- tinctively such, produced 9 In. truth slavery. is fatal to mental effort-in regard to the slave. owner no less than to the slave himself. To conclude, On which side is' ...

ARPIL FOOLS

... fired, Oh, Jouathan, nny son ! Spendtcug thy miilion-a day, Half frenzied half fix ?? Union who seek'st In cviv war, ?? in Slavery's school, What, oh my Jonathan, art thou, If not an April fool ? Asd lastly, Mother EDgland, thou T at sav'dt wax ends and ...

PRESIDENT LINCOLN AT BALTIMORE. F A I R

... shorter timne. Very few at that time thought the institution of slavery would be very much affected by it; but these expectations were not realised, and here we are-(laughter)-and slavery has been somewhat affected-(great- laughter). So true is it that ...

FINE ARTS

... Lovers of the Fine Arts will find Mr Hill's Galleries worthy of a visit at present. Air Noel Paton's illustrations of ' Slavery are exhibited; fu and while we do not think them quite worthy of b his reputation-not nearly so fine, for instance, as b ...

MR. MILL ON THE SUBJECTION OF WOMEN

... was adopted as the result of experience, but that there is clear proof that it is a mere vestige of an original state of slavery in which women were held by men by superior muscular strength. The inequality of rights between men and women has no other ...