Local tracts; Letters on the social condition of the people of England, 1831-2; Thoughts upon the aristocracy of England / ; All war inconsistent with the Christian religion and the best interests of nations; and the limit defined to which force may be applied by the civil magistrate in suppressing popular tumults / ; The practicability of improving the condition of the working classes: ; Declaration of the objects of the Newcastle upon Tyne Society for aboloshing slavery all over the world; Declaration and address of the Durham Society for the Universal Abolition of Slavery; An address delivered to the workmen employed at the Bedlington Iron Works, upon the 21st June, 1839 / ; Address of William Cargill, Esq. to the South Shields Chamber of Commerce, May 4, 1840, on the foreign policy of England; Examen de l'origine, des progrès et de la tendance de la confédération commerciale et politique contre L'Angleterre et La France nommée La Ligue Prussienne / ; Captain Fitz Roy's statement, August 1841; The revolution in the social state predicted by Sir Robert Peel: ; "I see something looming in the distance", said Benjamin Disraeli: ; Proselytism destructive of Christianity and incompatible with political dominion: ; The immediate cause of the Indian Mutiny, as set forth in the official correspondence: ; Tyrannicide: ; Bonaparte's challenge to tyrannicides / ; The European complication explained / ; Public meeting in promotion of universal peace, held in the Friend's Meeting House, Newcastle; The frontier of the Rhine and the meeting at Baden-Baden: ; The slaveholders' war: ; The true defence of England: ; Remarks on the civil liability of employers towards their workmen / ; Protection, or, Robbing Peter to pay Paul / ; The land question: Also, A letter to Isaac Tomkins, Gent., on the same subject ; addressed, by permission, to Charles John Bigge, Esq., Mayor of Newcastle / ; being a plain appeal to the integrity of landlords' understandings duly to recompense the toil of the most useful class of the community, viz: the labourers in agriculture ... ; also, an answer to the question, What can be done for Ireland? by showing what ought to be done for England! ... / ; herin are other matters nearer to hand, that may be distinguished with clearness; speech of Mr. Crawshay at the India House on the vote of an annuity to Sir John Lawrence, August 25, 1858; a lecture delivered at the Mechanic's Institution, Gateshead, on Wednesday evening, November 4th, 1857 / ; is it justifiable? / ; letter from Berlin to the 'Newcastle Journal' / ; an argument for the north and the Negro / ; the right of search / ; a reply to Mr Henry George ; a lecture / Dy 34Political

Book Cover
Average Rating
Publisher
Edward Truelove
Publication Date
[1859]
Edition
2nd ed.
Language
English