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Examiner, The

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London, England

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London, London, England

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455
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The Examiner

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... southern planters in favour of the existing slavery: Our presence as British subjects in Charleston, and amidst so large a number of persons in every grade of life who were one and all identified with the system of slavery, necessarily had the effect of bringing ...

THEATRICAL EXAMINER

... animals; and kicked his servant down stairs, and thence into the streets at midnight, for interrupting him in a tirade on Negro slavery. KEAN has made an abortive attempt to play Othello, (his son playing lago,) he broke down in the midst of the performance ...

BOOKS OF THE WEEK

... 'Life in the Forests of France.' (Hurst and Blackett.)_ Sketches in North America; with Some Account of Con. gress and the Slavery Question.' By H. Reid. (Longman and Co.)-'Rome in1860.' By EdwardDicey. (Cambridge: Macmillan and Co.) LAw.-' The Province ...

BOOKS OF THE WEEK

... BOOXS OF THE WEEK. TnArvnL-' Journeys and Explorations in the Cotton Kingdom: a Traveller's Observations on Cotton and Slavery in the American Slave States.' Based upon Three Former Volumes of Journeys and Investigations by the Same Author. By Frederick ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... vulganity in..the assailautsof slavery has. repelled,_ we would partidularly' com ed.nd the. concluding. essay,. inn this;, volume. There are notba fw-whom the dogmatical iguorance' id boundless presumption. of anti-slavery declainsers have ficed into. ...

ORIGINAL POETRY

... And a new spring of noble affectioni arise- Then might Freedom forgive thee this dance in thy chain, And this shout of thy slavery which saddens the skies. S. . Is it madness or meeansess which clings to thee now ? Were he God-as he is bht the commonest ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... aadversaries, and the earnestness -which would seem to preclude any doubt of his sincerity, with which he has fought against slavery in America; and, with the characteristic impudence of an American, he is advised henceforth to abstain from any such opposition ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... The impetuous policy of the anti-slavery party destroyed slavery in the British colonies, but also destroyed the British colonies themselves; and thereby caused so much opposition in other countries that the slavery which might otherwise have been got ...

FINE ARTS

... body of the other was treated as the vilest malefactor's, in the midst of a nation he had vin, dicated from double slavery, the slavery of a llawless prince and an intolerant priesthood. It is enough for Frenchmen that Napoleon had once humbledthe enemies ...

THEATRICAL EXAMINER

... the existence of slavery in the United States as discreditable, we have little objection to these pleasantries; but we know not if we are not quite'as amused at the apparent unconsciousness of honest John, that he. retains this slavery himself where alone ...

BOOKS OF THE WEEK

... ' De Quincey's Works. Vol. VII. (Post 8vo, pp. 352.) Edinburgh: A. and C. Black. EssAys.-' American States, Churches, and Slavery.' By the Rev. J. R. Balme, an American Clergyman; Author of 'The Lever of the Gospel,' &c. (Post Svo, pp. 546.) Nimmo. IEssays ...

BOOKS OF THE WEEK

... the Claymore, with a Visit to Damascus and the Lebanoin' By MUrs Harvey, of Ickwell-Bury. (Chapman and Hall.) POLTlCS.-' Slavery and Secession in America, Historical and Economical.' By Thomas Ellison, ?? &c., Author of ' andbo i to the Cotton Trade.' ...