Browsing named entities in Charles Congdon, Tribune Essays: Leading Articles Contributing to the New York Tribune from 1857 to 1863. (ed. Horace Greeley). You can also browse the collection for John Mitchel or search for John Mitchel in all documents.

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Charles Congdon, Tribune Essays: Leading Articles Contributing to the New York Tribune from 1857 to 1863. (ed. Horace Greeley), Mr. Mitchel's Desires. (search)
Mr. Mitchel's Desires. A mysterious philosopher of Massachusetts somewhere has remarked, that consistency is the vice of this aphorism is to be accepted, then we may suppose Mr. John Mitchel's intellect to be of gigantic proportions, and his brall the erratic men of a race notoriously erratic, Patriot Mitchel has turned the most bewildering flip-flaps. As a politica — n you, and for all our chattels, too, was the reply. Mr. Mitchel may succeed in convincing the Slaveholders, who are sadlful. They may insist upon the rule that half's fair. Mr. Mitchel, if we may judge by his prospectus, has entered upon hisold humbug. In pursuance of our advice, we think that Mr. Mitchel had better say nothing more of the reopening of the Afriand for the same commodity? We hope we shall not offend Mr. Mitchel's Hibernian sensibilities by the question, but how wouldeople to throw off the yoke; but when an Irish patriot, as Mitchel professes to have been, argues that the black man is not f
Charles Congdon, Tribune Essays: Leading Articles Contributing to the New York Tribune from 1857 to 1863. (ed. Horace Greeley), Mr. Mitchel's commercial views. (search)
Mr. Mitchel's commercial views. among the most consistent philosophers at present engaged in the support awe must certainly rank that illustrious patriot, John Mitchel, the Irishman, who is at present grinding in the of humanity, will be enraptured to learn that Mr. John Mitchel has reached the lowest depths of mental degradWhen a man honestly believes — and, of course, Mr. John Mitchel is honest — in manstealing and man-selling, itlie! responded the indignant histrion. But Mr. John Mitchel does not so answer, when his frankly avowal meg a good word in her defense. We say plainly to John Mitchel, that he does the slave-holder gross injustice. understand their own business quite as well as Mr. John Mitchel understands it; and if they are satisfied thatxpected to engage in it simply to gratify him. Mr. Mitchel propounds a theory of negro-importation in a gay,who has a lot of fine cheap fellows for sale, and Mr. Mitchel proposes, in his light way, to patronize the king
Greenville, Lord, on Emancipation329 Goethe on the Future of America808 Greatness, Historical856 Hamilton, Alexander, on the Union297 Hawks, Dr., his Twelve Questions305 Independence, Declaration of139 Independence, Southern Association for265 Ireland, The Case of294 Johnson, Reverdy42 Johnson, Dr., his Favorite Toast329 Lord, President3, 319 Lawrence, Abbot25 Ludovico, Father54 Lincoln, Abraham181, 384 Letcher, Governor340 Mason, John Y13, 24 Mitchel, John20, 50 Matthews, of Virginia, on Education92 Montgomery, The Muddle at181 Morse, Samuel and Sidney186 Meredith, J. W., his Private Battery141 McMahon, T. W., his Pamphlet214 Monroe, Mayor, of New Orleans234 Malcolm, Dr., on Slavery248 Maryland, The Union Party in260 Mallory, Secretary280 McClellan, General, as a Pacificator370 Mercury, The Charleston399 Netherlands, Deacon17 North, Southern Notions of the144 Olivieri, The Abbe, on Negro Educati