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LITERATURE

... Greeu & Co 1870. (Pp. 820.) Tins is essentially the age of Iron and Steel. It was our wont' only a very few years since to speak and write of the Iron Age par excer- trace; but since the Cheltenham meeting of the B'ritish Association in 1856, when ...

LITERATURE

... are gradually teaching those who by their commanding talents are capable of becoming the teachers of others; for Bastiat speaks with the greatest force to the higher order of intellects. At the same time, he is almost the osly political economist whose ...

CHARLES DICKENS

... veil, =-Before tie Judge who motes to men their dues, el acchiek, through Ersglish-speeleinslande, turn pale, 'I 3F:ares the speaking ?? can bear the sews- flsrclred at t~ls auidleln sllaphing of alife,: ?? 'liat seemed of all ourlives to hold a share; So ...

LITERATURE

... itut suscl Atumld its tite wauy. jLitt it apthcitre thact sucht lis the tttfC!I-ii of the vusilett mother, that ''indeed to speak of beiag separated from her children would ha regarded by liar as sacrilege. We must, therefore, spare them her care. As a ...

LITERATURE

... suggested by tire writer's habit of judging everything relatively to thle cor- nit responding circumstances at hiome. W He speaks ft-cn at greater familiiarity with the pepe n sno their wax's titan thle ordinary toicrist, who thinks a4 firing he lie visit ...

LITERATURE

... Take away the hereditary peerage, and you have America to-morrow either in Britain, or in any country occupied by English- speaking men. All British colonies are little Americas, and at the same time small Englands, wantieg only some of those elements of ...

LITERATURE

... day, with its embellishmrents,,checapness, and nastiness. As for the internal value of this fine series, we need not speak-the names speak for themselves. The man, therefore, with even limited means, but -with unlimited desire to .-jsaeo I tei~te~rary treasrs ...

LITERATURE

... real grievance or injustice to exist; they might be assured I would have it removed. There was a dean silence when I stopped speaking. It was broken by a etentorian voice, Then yen womr't reduce our rents 7 I have already given you Mr Shirley's answer upon ...

THE MAGAZINES

... har. bouiriug any misgivings respecting the issues of the strife as it is now conducted. The indepen- dent party of which we speak are too prudent, as well as too loyal, to let the sense of a slight which hail better have been avoided interfere with the ...

LITERATURE

... considered swind- 3 hang, )without any reliso~ch or consciousness of -degradation. -We have left ourselves little rpom to speaks of the admirable way in which Bl. O'M~aleY has eied th ere erjeant's book, The eiior- 1 mous1 accumulations -of valnable ...

LITERATURE

... spirit wvhieh has evidently animated their comzposition. Th1e Rev. Alfred Ainger, the Render of the Tomple Church iu London, speaks froml a p~lace consecrated hy manly revered memories; hut the spirit in whlich, to j3udge fiom t~hese sermons, lie addresses ...

LITERATURE

... to be otherwvise explained by' ctery disceiple of Mr Huxley. The conclusion ~;r~tllilg lqss thaht ?? we have no morq pstto speak, of: the present inhabitantts of' pitain than of those of Ireland as an Axiglo- Esioil peol~lci that there is tiso same mixtare ...