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REVIEWS OF BOOKS

... m the hall went down To fed the little raved in the ?? That holloa as the gay b rouoherolls by, 'Tweie well f6- s am In Socialist I think you said? Tbat is a strange long word. Think you, you know the meaning of the same? ;l6dr terms like thede are tossed ...

SOCIALIST POETRY

... SOCIALIST POETR 1K. .APOLOGY is hardlv needed for calling attention to the ballad poetry of French Socialism, especially such a collection of it as appears in the i'andsome volume before us. The theories of Fourier, St. Simon, Cabel, and the rest may ...

THE BANE OF A LIFE.*

... in the union some very faint resemblance to the sturdy protective guilds of older times there is even a dim shadowing of socialist principles, and an acceptance of the dogma that the rights and interests of the individual must give way to the common weal ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... of Paris to visit and ' fraternise ' with them, for the pur- pose of fellowship and union against the common enemies, the socialists and the reactionary parties (Imperialist and Royal). The National Guards of Paris were thus invited by those of Havre. At ...

THE MAGAZINES FOR SEPTEMBER

... we should send more people to become landowners in the colonies, as it 1.5 hopeless forlte'oepc n hr of the English soil. Socialist reformiers who are beginning to ~prick uip, theIir, ears now that, there is'a Republic across Dover Straits', m~ay reply ...

Published: Saturday 17 September 1870
Newspaper: Graphic
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 2014 | Page: 11 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

JOHN WESLEY.*

... form in which it actually appeared ; why, for example, it should not have resembled the novel High Churchl movement, or the socialist movement, or any of the other protests against the evils of mrodern society. Few people, perhaps, could deal with such pioblhn ...

LITERARY

... past. THE MAGAZINES. All who would understand the real source and the real issues of the present struggle between the Paris Socialists and the Versailles Monarchists will do -,ell to read Mr Frederic Harrison's splendid article in the Foritightly on The ...

LITERARY

... decentralisation as was aimed at by the Paris Commune. It is not strange that Mr Senior should have looked with horror upon the socialist schemes for tyranny over the whole country that were in vogue in 1848 and after. He would probably have looked with equal ...

MR. SENIOR'S JOURNALS IN FRANCE AND ITALY

... citizens as children to be all taken care of by the State. Thiers, who speaks and writes so well against Socialism, is a Socialist so far as he is an Imperialist and a Protectionist. But without an appeal to any general principle of this kind it is quite ...

LITERARY

... quote a retrospective paragraph from the author's notes on the 7th of December: At the time Flourons returned to Paris, the Socialist party, encouraged by the signs of speedy dissolution every day more apparent in the policy of the Empire, was struggling ...

LITERARY

... held aloof from the Red Republicans; and in theory, at any rate, they have never sympathised with the Reds. Les vrais socialistes, as M. Villetard says, vouent A la mnme execration Louis XVI. et Robespierre, Pun comme chef de l'aristocratie, et l'autre ...

ST. SIMON AND ST. SIMONISM

... AND ST. SIMONISMH,` IT is highly probably that this chapter in the history of French Socialism will be the beginning of a socialist literature. We must now naturally look for novels, dramas, biographies, criticisms, and dissertations illus- trative of one ...