The life of Horace Greeley, editor of "The New-York tribune" : from his birth to the present time . -. cannon balls flew around us like hail.—Cor. Louisville Cour. PEOVOOATION. Complaints of Charles Dickens Advocacy of International O^pyright at public dinners. EEPLY. We trust he will not be deterred from speaking the frank, round truth bjany mistaken courtesy, diffidence, or misapprehension of public ught to speak out on this matter, for whc shall protest against robbery 240 EDITORIAL REPARTEES. if those who are robbed may not? Here is a man who writes for a livingand writes nobl


The life of Horace Greeley, editor of "The New-York tribune" : from his birth to the present time . -. cannon balls flew around us like hail.—Cor. Louisville Cour. PEOVOOATION. Complaints of Charles Dickens Advocacy of International O^pyright at public dinners. EEPLY. We trust he will not be deterred from speaking the frank, round truth bjany mistaken courtesy, diffidence, or misapprehension of public ught to speak out on this matter, for whc shall protest against robbery 240 EDITORIAL REPARTEES. if those who are robbed may not? Here is a man who writes for a livingand writes nobly; and we of this country greedily devour his writings, areentertained and instructed by them, yet refuse so to protect his rights as anauthor that he can realize a single dollar from all their vast American saleand popularity. Is this right 1 Do we look well offering him toasts, compli-ments, and other syllabub, while we refuse him naked justice 7 while weeay that every man may take from him the fruits of his labors without recom-pense or redress 1 It does very well in a dinner speech to say th


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1870, booksubjectgreeley, bookyear1872