قراءة كتاب Nuts and Nutcrackers

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‏اللغة: English
Nuts and Nutcrackers

Nuts and Nutcrackers

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
الصفحة رقم: 3

tag="{http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml}a">A NUT FOR THE EAST INDIA DIRECTORS

183 A FILBERT FOR SIR ROBERT PEEL 185 “THE INCOME TAX” 186 A NUT FOR THE “BELGES” 189 A NUT FOR WORKHOUSE CHAPLAINS 192 A NUT FOR THE “HOUSE” 197 A NUT FOR “LAW REFORM” 200 A NUT FOR “CLIMBING BOYS” 203 A NUT FOR “THE SUBDIVISION OF LABOUR” 206 A NUT FOR A “NEW VERDICT” 212 A NUT FOR THE REAL “LIBERATOR” 216 A NUT FOR “HER MAJESTY’S SERVANTS” 221 A NUT FOR THE LANDLORD AND TENANT COMMISSION 225 A NUT FOR THE HUMANE SOCIETY 228

A NUT FOR MEN OF GENIUS.


If Providence, instead of a vagabond, had made me a justice of the peace, there is no species of penalty I would not have enforced against a class of offenders, upon whom it is the perverted taste of the day to bestow wealth, praise, honour, and reputation; in a word, upon that portion of the writers for our periodical literature whose pastime it is by high-flown and exaggerated pictures of society, places, and amusements, to mislead the too credulous and believing world; who, in the search for information and instruction, are but reaping a barren harvest of deceit and illusion.

Every one is loud and energetic in his condemnation of a bubble speculation; every one is severe upon the dishonest features of bankruptcy, and the demerits of un-trusty guardianship; but while the law visits these with its pains and penalties, and while heavy inflictions follow on those breaches of trust, which affect our pocket, yet can he “walk scatheless,” with port erect and visage high who, for mere amusement—for the passing pleasure of the moment—or, baser still, for certain pounds per sheet, can, present us with the air-drawn daggers of a dyspeptic imagination for the real woes of life, or paint the most common-place and tiresome subjects with colours so vivid and so glowing as to persuade the unwary reader that a paradise of pleasure and enjoyment, hitherto unknown, is open before him. The treadmill and the ducking-stool, “me judice,” would no longer be tenanted by rambling gipsies or convivial rioters, but would display to the admiring gaze of an assembled multitude the aristocratic features of Sir Edward Bulwer Lytton, the dark whiskers of D’Israeli, the long and graceful proportions of Hamilton Maxwell, or the portly paunch and melo-dramatic frown of that right pleasant fellow, Henry Addison himself.

You cannot open a newspaper without meeting some narrative of what, in the phrase of the day, is denominated an “attempted imposition.” Count Skryznyzk, with black

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