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Pall Mall Gazette

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London, London, England

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Pall Mall Gazette

REVIEWS

... wedge; and the Kafirs-reputed descendants of the ancient Greeks, but dirty thieves to-day-learned, too, what massacre and slavery meant. But the Government of India sees in Afghanistan, as the Ameer saw in the Hazarajat and Kafiristan, an opening for, ...

THE ISLAND OF CUBA.*

... have another, she sells it to a friend for a real. Thus the child becomes a slave-of course without any of the penalties of slavery- . and is warranted to live. The wretched always live on-such must be the idea-and of all the unhappy on earth the slaves ...

ENGLAND'S EAST AFRICAN POLICY

... well to the native populations as to ourselves. In his brief historical survey the author attributes the introduction of slavery to the Portuguese-a debateable statement, to say the least of it. The 'Omanis held slaves long before the time of Vasco de ...

SLAVE SONGS

... high musical organization of the negro needs no better proof than the fact tat slavery never was able to keep him from singing. This is none the less true because slavery never directly tried to do so, but graciously per- 1itted him to exercise his vocal ...

LITERARY AND ART NOTES

... Lowell, showing him identified as a young man with the Garrison anti-slavery movement, having been promised, the Boston; Ierald has anticipated them by reprinting some early anti-slavery verse of Mr. Lowell's, which hitherto could only be seen in ald newspapers ...

NEW BOOKS

... His contention is that the well-to-do have no right to their enjoyments while the majority are in a condition of practical slavery; and the more kind-hearted and influential citizens call our attention to the happiness within our reach the less we shall ...

NAPOLEON I., AFTER A RUSSIAN POET

... might To level empires had gone forth. Obedient to thy wayward will The flags of Ruin were unfurled, And laid the yoke of slavery still Upon the kindreds of the world. And France, the prey of her renown,. Drew back her fa scinated eye From hopes majestic ...

NEW BOOKS

... m, to 1789 ; Constitutional Government, to 181o; the Rise of Democracy, to 18 I 5 the Rise of Nationality, to 1840 ; the Slavery Struggle, to I86o; Secession and Reconstruction, to IS76 ; and, lastly, Trade and Protection. ...

TO-DAY'S NEW BOOKS

... and Soui.) [A record of travels in China, Japan, and the Philippine Islandr. T'io vols.] WHITTIER, JOHN GREENLEAF. 'Aeti-Slavery Poems: Songs of Labour and Reform, (Mactillan and Co.) [The rew volume of the unifern editioa of Whittier's Poems. Pp. vii ...

HERMANN AGHA

... painted. Hermann Agha, the narrator and principal character of the story, is a Saxon, who in his boyhood had been carried into slavery by a band of Turkish marauders. He is sold to the newly appointed Pasha of Bagdad, and in attending his master from Constantinople ...

LES MARIS SONT ESCLAVES

... himself as a thorouzgh1 infidel on the subject of matrimonial felicity. The married man IS a wretched being condemned to slavery of the most unbearable kind; a cashier bound to supply a reckless woman with means for her extravagance; a dog obliged to ...

PROSPECTS SEEN THROUGH COLOURED GLASSES

... the world, according as they approve -or disapprove the institutions under which they are governed. In the time of negro slavery there were always two such classes of travellers.: the one who witnessed nothing but fetters and flogging, the other who saw ...