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Reynolds's Newspaper

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London, England

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340

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Reynolds's Newspaper

LITERARY MISCELLANEA

... by the higher animals-should rob and spoil, defend their homes, be jealous, revengeful, aud disputative, and should war in armies-yet such is the case Thus bees, if the meat of one hive be spent, will assail their next neigh- bours, w~ih intent to rob ...

POEMS FOR THE MASSES

... is that to our stand(ing army of a million and a quarter paupers, mnintained at a cost of ten or twelve millions annuallyP For this monstrous evil and dis- ?? we must fied a remedy, or make it. The land- lords' tax oil the land in tie forum of rent amounts ...

LITERARY MISCELLANEA

... chest, it was made in the ninth year of eilely VIII. LOVE-ANECDOTE Or FRANcis 1--Francis folloewl in person, with his main army; yet, it appears hle vwas iot so fully occupied with the affairs of battle as to negleft any of his chivalrous observances ...

SCRAPS FROM THE COMIC JOURNALS

... in th hite man'sn land P Ter Shah of Persia has telegraphed to the Sulban for the despatch of an army corps to the frontier to assist the Persian troops in queling the insurrection among the Kurds. ALLPI1GED CHILD Mrane.-A young woman, named Mary Davies ...

LITERARY MISCELLANEA

... common occurrence, and deemed no reproal to a young man of the2 best society, to live at the expense of the woman (invariably a married woman) with om he was on a criminal footing ,- nay,' that he would task his ingenuity to contrive new expedients of ...

THE DEMOCRATIC WORLD

... there are thousands of acres of land tbat could ho brought into practical use, They could be kept in tourh with military service on the same ;irinciple as our volunteers. In this way my correspondent thinks a colonial army and nary of well-trained und season- ...

REVIEWS OF BOOKS

... of respectable daughters in Eng- land to save them from the awful life into which I, in blind ignorance, plunged-a life of which the associa. tions are vile, the hours long, the wages miserable; a life which no woman who respects herself can come out ...

REVIEWS OF BOOKS

... the Prince's army at Falkirk, where the boistful Genesal Hawley received a severe lesson. The fear of an invasion of the South of England hein now soitemovod, the Duke of Csumbes'land hanteuted to Srotlaild, and took comamand of the army. The High'anlers ...

REVIEWS OF BOOKS

... clique, prevailed upon the king behind the back of his responsiblo advisers to bring up the army for the purpose of overawing, perhaps of crushing, the Assembly. The army, infected with revolutionary seutiment and miserably ill-haudled, broke. But in the meautimne ...

BOOKS AND MAGAZINES

... mountains inhabited by thie last Lennuriau (or yellow woman), with her bordes of shrivelled-up mumnmies and Banysp. The latter is half-fashioned like a man and half like a lizard. The last Lemurian is a woman of large stature-20ft. high-and with supernatural ...

LITERARY MISCELLANEA

... of virtue and woman's life. If they rear children servants and' nurses do all, save to give them birth. And when reaored, what are they? What do they ever amount to, but weaker scions of the old stock ? Who ever heard of a fashionable woman's child exhibiting ...

REVIEWS OF BOOKS

... on following the line of demar- cation lbetwit t.mtatwo armies, I had frequent occasion to noticm thetery eurious-dialognes which were passing be- tween the sentinels of the husntending armies; -and one in particular, which made a deeper impression on ...