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WAS CHRIST A SOCIALIST?: THE SEQUEL TO MR. CAMPBELL'S NEW THEOLOGY

... WAS CHRIST A SOCIALIST? THE SEQUEL TO MR. CAMPBELL'S NEW THEOLOGY The Rev. R. J. Campbell (why is he not Dr.?) says I now regard Socialism as the practical expression of Christian ethics and the Evangel of Jesus. He says it in the course of a most ...

Published: Wednesday 29 January 1908
Newspaper: The Bystander
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 778 | Page: 40 | Tags: Review 

at the Theatre: The Chiltern Hundreds Vaudeville

... and when he turns out to be, ot his son, but the Socialist, he is rather ■lieved. Dashed absurd to invite your own on for the weekend, especially as the castle also his home. But the victorious Socialist is almost immedi- ;cly sent to the Lords, and the ...

Published: Wednesday 10 September 1947
Newspaper: The Tatler
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 910 | Page: 7 | Tags: Review 

AT THE DUKE OF YORK'S THEATRE: LOAVES AND FISHES

... a blow to Canon Spratte when he finds that his daughter has been so far carried away by the eloquence of an ardent young Socialist as to fall in love with him. But he is too astute a schemer to be troubled for long by this threatened leavening of A the ...

Published: Wednesday 15 March 1911
Newspaper: The Bystander
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 750 | Page: 20 | Tags: Review 

BOOKS

... who is a socialist. Woven through the book is a love story and his dealings with his non- politically minded doctor brother Antoine, but all the time there is talk about the new world which is coming. There is endless talk among the socialist hub of all ...

Published: Saturday 01 March 1941
Newspaper: Britannia and Eve
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 1265 | Page: 60 | Tags: Review 

ALDWYCH THEATRE: Nelly Neil

... has lifted him out of the ranks of the amateurs. There are some very taking numbers in the piece, notably, the song of the Socialists, I Sing of the Millennium; a butterfly song by a lady whom I was not able to identify on the programme; and the song in ...

Published: Wednesday 23 January 1907
Newspaper: The Bystander
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 526 | Page: 22 | Tags: Review 

THE LIBRARY: A Book About Hungary

... serious, and be really appreciative of the intensities of Mr. Bernard Shaw. I have received a copy of the The Anti-Socialist Anti-Socialist, of which exten sive advance notices have already appeared. The founder, Mr. Claude Lowther, has, I believe, the ...

Published: Wednesday 03 February 1909
Newspaper: The Bystander
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 1356 | Page: 37 | Tags: Review 

The Moods Of Our Time

... politics he is disillusioned, frustrated, at odds both with his Conservative relatives he is the son of a lord and his young Socialist sister, mother of a love-child, s His success in journalism is small compensation for the shattering of his dreams of a better ...

Published: Tuesday 01 July 1947
Newspaper: Britannia and Eve
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 211 | Page: 43 | Tags: Review 

The Bystander Bookshelf: Women in Love--and in Politics

... much interest, and which I will not here attempt to summarise. Mr. Stokes him self is not a socialist but that does not mean that he writes as an anti-socialist. When he is not (as he usually is) strictly impartial, he tends to regard M. Blum in a friendly ...

Published: Wednesday 30 June 1937
Newspaper: The Bystander
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 1191 | Page: 29 | Tags: Review 

The Story of Stephen Compton

... to No. 10, Downing Street, might concisely describe the progress of Stephen Compton. He started his political career as a Socialist in a disreputable workmen's club, and much weight is given through many a dreary page to the fact that his mind, so balanced ...

Published: Wednesday 12 February 1913
Newspaper: The Sketch
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 264 | Page: 48 | Tags: Review 

THE WALL OF GLASS

... affairs. Man is a political animal by choice, not by instinct where the primitive being extrudes, the convictions of her Socialists and Conser vatives alike take on a tinge of artificiality. Sage things are put into the young people's mouths, Aristotelian ...

Published: Wednesday 01 June 1927
Newspaper: The Sketch
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 273 | Page: 89 | Tags: Review