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Pall Mall Gazette

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Pall Mall Gazette

NEW BOOKS AND NEW EDITION'S

... he considers self-contradictions. He avers that during a residence in Africa of ten years he has met with but one case of slavery and that on British territory. He considers that the Dutch are superior to the English as masters and civilizers. IHe denies ...

A YEAR'S HOUSEKEEPING IN SOUTH AFRICA.*

... as much daily work as an English boy of twelve years old could manage easily. Marriage to the Kaffir women means simply slavery. Unlike the Maories, the IKaffirs, an almost equally fine race, show no signs of dying out, but exhibit in many respects a ...

LITERARY AND ART NOTES, ETC

... and after visiting the Pearl of the Antilles, he will probably visit other West Indian islands for the purpose of studying slavery as it exists. In about a twelvemonth, therefore, we may expect an eloquent literary vindication of that domestic institution ...

THE LIFE OF JAMES DIXON

... Wesleyan Conference. He took a considerable part in the anti-slavery movement. The report that is given of a speech that he made in 1837 in Exeter Hall on missions, when he thus touched on the slavery question, shows that he was no mean public speaker. He just ...

A NEW WORK ON INTERNATIONAL LAW

... been the practice to surrender slaves who have taken refuge on board English war vessels lying in the waters of States where slavery exists under sanction of the territorial law we regret that he does not make it clear that since the withdrawal of certain ...

NEW BOOKS AND NEW EDITIONS

... he considers self-contradictions. He avers that during a residence in Africa of ten years he has met with but one case of slavery and that on British territory. He considers that the Dutch are superior to the English as masters and civilizers. He denies ...

HODGKIN'S ITALY AND HER INVADERS

... his book which are best worth studying. Among the best of them are the remarks on slavery. We never saw the difference between the older and the modern forms of slavery better put. It might be summed up epigrammatically by saying that t e Roman slaves ...

A NEW WORK ON INTERNATIONAL LAW.*

... been the practice to surrender slaves who have taken refuge on board English war vessels lying in the waters of States where slavery exists under sanction of the territorial law, we regret that he does not make it clear that since the withdrawal of certain ...

THE LIFE OF JAMES DIXON.*

... Wesleyan Conference. He took a considerable part in the anti-slavery movement. The report that is given of a speech that he made in 1837 in Exeter Hall on missions, when he thus touched on the slavery question, shows that he was no mean public speaker. He just ...

REVIEWS

... their pictures before us with a new clearness of outline. Nowadays, says a recent writer, nobody regrets the abolition of slavery except the negroes. This cynical dictum is probably as true as most paradoxes. Possibly it is even truer. But Mr. Bradley ...

REVIEWS

... instincts and aristocratic prejudices led him to assume an independent attitude in regard to democracy. He recognized that slavery was a necessary factor in primitive civili- sation. As in a herd of wild horses, the strong must develop at the expense of ...

MR. PERCY GREG'S ERRANT

... surprising in this; most genuine Tories-and Mr. Greg is' a Tory, if hatred of Liberal statesmen can make him one-are lovers of slavery in their hearts; we only wonder that he is not more consistent. How could he describe with such pathetic force the sale of ...