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Literary Notices

... the pro- slavery shareholders deserve at once to be reduced to a parallel with the basest criminals that lie fettered within the cells of our public prisons.-P. 158. Shall we pat the bloodhounds of' slavery ? Shall we fee the curs of slavery ? Shall ...

THE FINE ARTS

... their peculiarities, therefore, we merely mention that they are there. In noticing in our last the sketches illustrative of Slavery, by J. Noel Paton, ?? now on view in Hill's Gallery, we omitted to state that the series, photographed by Mr Thomas Annan ...

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 ...

THE PHILOSOPHY OF POPULAR AMUSEMENTS

... worse appear the ,ard better part,' he held the following language:- rhat ' ow, gentlemen, we will come to this question of slavery, like and you may. perhaps, be surprised that I do not term it art, one of the causes of the war. You have been told that ...

THEATRICAL SPECULATIONS

... July 25 (Aug. 6), 1863. THE ABOLITION OF SLAVERY IN THE DUTCH COLONIES. The Surinarm Cournnt gives the following account of the proceedings at that place on the lst of July, the day of the emancipation from slavery in the Dutch colonies:- Paramaribo, July ...

LITERATURE

... theer tory ,ideas of slavery loom certain loading eend indisputable feeets in E 4, the history of thie war, rather than from partisan sources of en-. r formation and the literary inlventionlsof the North. Theowarlhas- shown that slavery Icon been an elemeeet ...

LITERATURE

... Prosperity of Or7ea Britain and Commerce of tice Asnerican lRepublics, con- thi siderce in connection with the System of Negro Slavery the in the Confederate States. By GEOnGE MCHNssY. api London: Saunders, Otley, & Co. ter TEis book is written with strong ...

MOURAVIEFF SHOWING MERCY

... The King ?? that the decision of a just tribunal offers the onlY means for the restoration of peace. The abeolt tion of slavery, if stipulated for at all, shoulil te gradual. America and Europe should together make provision for the slave. Mediatioi ...

THE BANQUET IN THE MUSIC HALL

... countenance to those acts of violence and slavery. Alucll as I deteste-l slavery, much as I pitied th(ose who were its victims,-anti I piteeti among ifs victims the masters of the slaves, evhoi I teelted victins of slavery as well as the poor slaves themselves- ...

FASHIONS FOR APRIL

... compelled to do the severest drudgery. To write La for a paper is very well, but to edit one is to eon- dem n yourself to slavery. oh Do Signor Ratazzi's presence in Paris is confined to D3 conjuga interests and perfectly unpolitical; D indeed a malicious ...

Original Poetry

... frown which blasts the rage of war. Near by, Port Hudson crumbles into dast- Twin ramparts of a wrong they rose and fell; In Slavery's cause they serv'd a Pemberton' But Freedom claimed them, and brave Grant has won. Tihe blood of traitors stained the river's ...

THE MAGAZINES FOR OCTOBER

... consumptian of coal is at present going lon. - The UNITED PnESBYTEruaAN MAGAZINE opens with a short but telling article on Slavery in con- nection with the present war in America. The remarks in it on the sympathy of many of our journals with the Southerners ...