AMERICAN LITERATURE.
The intemperate and reckless language used by a section of the American pi ess is well-known. Mark M. Pomeroy, editor of the Democrat, pttblished daily in New York, affords :n example. He wrote a life of General Benjamin F. Butler, and the book is selling in large numbers. Here is his language:—"Never, in all the annals of history, was there so beastly a man, so corrupt a politician, so big a thief, so unprincipled a robber, so extensive a swindler, so lying, debased, and cowardly a, knave, such an insulter of virtue, innocence, and womanly goodness, so speculative an executive, so rotfen, venal, corrupt infamous, sneakbig, contemptible, brutal, incompetent, universally despised and detested an individual as Benjamin F. Butler, who has graduated in every school of vice, an k become a leader in the ' great moral party,' as the party he belongs to claim to be." In another part he says that Butler is " a living evidence of rascality cor: ruption, double-dealing, trickery,fratid, swindling, cowardice, bank-robbing, spoon-stealing, woman-insulting, houseplundering, enemy-aiding, countrybetraying, Government-sucking, treas-ury-filching, soldier-killing, prisonfilling, God-forgetting, hell-deserving, truth-ignoring, virtue-wronging, negroloving, vice-caressing, man-deceiving, law-destroying, church-pilfering, bul-lion-bagging, cotton-stealing, diamondfinding, vessel-clearing, crockery-mark-ing, town-sucking, enemy-helping, powder-waisting, officer-murdering, spite-loving, nation-disgracing, friendforgotton, and all-detested thief, robber, braggart, plunderer, bag-eyed bullion beggar, and the most detested, corrupt, selfish, false-hearted pet of perdition in all anna's of crime and infamy, past, present, or to come." Can you, Mr reader, reckon how many libels there are in these extracts?
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Westport Times, Volume III, Issue 406, 18 November 1868, Page 3
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242AMERICAN LITERATURE. Westport Times, Volume III, Issue 406, 18 November 1868, Page 3
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