Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Foreword
- Dramatis Personae
- Chapter I Backdrop
- Chapter II A Conspiracy
- Chapter III The Intruder from the North
- Chapter IV An Inauspicious Start
- Chapter V Portrait of a Newspaper
- Chapter VI The Sequel
- Epilogue
- Appendix I The ‘Poisonous Pen’ of John Gibson Lockhart
- Appendix II John Wilson Croker as a Literary Critic
- Acknowledgements
- Bibliography
- Index
Chapter V - Portrait of a Newspaper
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Foreword
- Dramatis Personae
- Chapter I Backdrop
- Chapter II A Conspiracy
- Chapter III The Intruder from the North
- Chapter IV An Inauspicious Start
- Chapter V Portrait of a Newspaper
- Chapter VI The Sequel
- Epilogue
- Appendix I The ‘Poisonous Pen’ of John Gibson Lockhart
- Appendix II John Wilson Croker as a Literary Critic
- Acknowledgements
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
The best way to appreciate the Representative is to read the newspaper itself, so in the following pages there is a small selection of articles dealing with miscellaneous topics organised chronologically in order to help follow the newspaper's development. The issue of 8 February, for instance, offers interesting and varied reading of well organised pieces, arranged, as usual, in a mosaic-like combination. Apart from letters to the editor, there are notes on the arts, the army, the Church, archaeology, and also news from the United States, Trieste, and Turkey, as well as domestic news. These were often borrowed from other publications, a common practice for newspapers at the time:
Letters, dated Dec. 19, have been received from Port-au-Prince, by way of Havre, but they mention no fact of public interest, except that the discontent among the natives at the subserviency to France was on the increase, particularly in the northern part of the island.
The Bolton Chronicle sa ys, a dreadful accident occurred on Monday last, at the factory of Messrs. E. and W. Bolling, in Bridge-street, Little Bolton. To Eliz. Kenworthy, a child only eight years and eight months old. She had been engaged rather more than a week in the factory, and was putting some rovings into the creel, when her clothes were caught by the shaft, and she was instantly twisted up to the creel, with such velocity that her head was entirely separated from her body.
SILK TRADE
(From the READING MERCURY.)
We understand that a petition from the silk weavers in this town, for the continuation of the prohibition of foreign manufactured silk, will in a few days be presented to the House of Commons, by our worthy and excellent representative, Mr. Monck. Our readers are aware, that in July next it is proposed to admit the importation of foreign-wrought silk, at a protecting duty of thirty per cent. This was part of the arrangement in the Session of 1824, when the duty on raw silk was repealed ; and the measure was supported by both the Members for this borough, because, in common with a large majority in both Houses of Parliament, they considered it as the beginning of a new system of free trade, that would of course speedily abolish those odious restrictions and monopolies which are the bane of commerce in every quarter of the globe.
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- Benjamin Disraeli and John Murray: The Politician, The Publisher and The Representative , pp. 107 - 132Publisher: Liverpool University PressPrint publication year: 2016