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Dublin, Republic of Ireland

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998

Type

998

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GREAT TEMPERANCE SOIREE AND ENTERTAINMENT AT KILLARNEY TO THE LIBERATOR

... Ireland has ever 'produced (cheers)-had not been my precursor, I would not venture to consult millions of men listening to the story of their wrongs, and determined to have their country righted, but that they were checked by the moral miracle of the tee- ...

LITERATURE

... world. The circumstances which eventuated in his conversion are, as generally occurs in such cases, variously stated. One story says he was turned to pious sources by an escape he had while shooting, of which lie was passionately fond. He and his cp m ...

LITERATURE

... deal too much of animosity to the grant to Maynooth. & Tales of the Trains, and More Mare's Nests, are stories remarkably well told. A short and serious essay ''On the Inspiration of the Artist, is well deserving of attention. The Nevilles of G ...

LITERATURE

... unprofitable and ungracious to attempt a farther parallel. We have not said as muuch as we could wish for this Essay, but two short passages from its contents will do the rest :_ EFFECT OF THE AMERICAN REVOLrUTION, The contest with the American colonies ...

FASHIONABLE INTELLIGENCE

... (to-morrow.) DEATH OF LORD BATEDIAN.-We have to record the atdecass of a third member of the upper house of parliament withia the short space of as many days. The nobleman whose name is prefixed to this paragraph expired at an early hour otl Y Tuisday morning ...

LITERATURE

... This is a noble duty-, a task, as himself expresses it, ' in which any man may feel proud to engage-a task which, in the story before us, has been nobly executed, and which must ensure to the author the respect and affection of every honest Irishman ...

THE DUBLIN UNIVERSITY MAGAZINE

... contributors. All these combine to make this number a rich treat to the lovers of poetry. Of the prose contributions, the stories named Recollections ofthe Gifted, Money Mlatters; or, ttories of Gold, will supply amusement to the r-ader. To the admirers ...

LITERATURE

... answered, I How should I tj know ?-why did you not take care of it ?-I suppose the dogs have eaten it.' SL We shall make another short extract in order to show It the degradation to which the inhuman institution of slavery m can reduce its victims:- g- While ...

FASHIONABLE INTELLIGENCE

... TNE MIAID AND TiHE Spin ?? Gqzette de Tribu. nasr relates the following anecdote, which, if true, throws into the shade the story upon which the opera of the Gaza ljaura is founded. M. P-had two enamel shirt studs sur- notapted by a small fly of burnished ...

DOLMAN'S MAGAZINE

... rest of their fellow-citizens-but as members of the general community of which they con. stitute a portion. The editor's story, 1 the Countess Clemence, continues with its usual interest in this number, and is followed by a very good article on the ...

LITERATURE

... wretches whose criminal weakness ventures to listen to their dangerous and delusive representations. The moral lesson of this story, from the dissemination of which in any of our disturbed agricultural districts we feel assured the greatest benefit would ...

LITERATURE

... this age it may be) more probably of the next. Whoever shall accomplish it will not be a creature of hectic enthusiasm and short-winded research, he will not sit down to his task with the cheap adjectives of scorn upon his lips, but must know, as he does ...