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FOR THE CALEDONIAN MERCURY

... 'Tis that alone can bid me live, My Phillida! when torn from thee; For e en thyself no joy can give, If doom'd to dwell in slavery. Adieu! my life! my only light ! My best reward for doing right! The sole rewards desired by me, Are Phillida and liberty ...

FINE ARTS

... against his captors, and not admire the painter's moral art, and not acknowledge the vain t lue of freedom, or feel hatred to slavery; it must a be the frozen in soul who would not feel to the 1 heart's core the expression df his t sister, as she 1 averts ...

FINE ARTS

... else settled sadness of these tl( hiiteresting victims, about to he torts for ?? fontr their kiti- mt dred, and sold into slavery. T'here is a melancholy grace anid sweetness in their simple uniaffected sorrow. The chisrivA saf youth and elcgafice~of form ...

COVENT GARDEN THEATRE

... finds hlis log--t'hreatened vengeance t lengthi in' his own powver. ' reso]ves to de- tain Clifton's wife and. child' in slavery, afid sha his person arrested for a debt, in which he had gonet security for a worthless fellow of the name of Sharpset. Gambia ...

ITALY

... cattion-how ?? the mock bravery, Lonigin~g fior liberty, shritiks lionr the strilb; The spirit that savcs fronl the dutigeotn of slavery, Or gives us to frecdoin, or takes us front life. ['tit, Sept. 22. The Boston Gazette observes- We understand that the keel ...

SCHOOL OF ARTS

... prosspectus, he observed that it had been tle proud distinction of Scotland, that while other countries were b huried in tite slavery of ignorance, the blessings of educa. lion had been here diffused by locans of our parochial in. in stitutions-and the harriel ...

SCHOOL OF ARTS, EDINBURGH

... the prospectus, he observed that it ' Ien the proud distinction of Scotland, that 4'e other countries were buried in the slavery of kirallace, the blessings of education iatl been here did by, means of our parochial institutions-and 15ebtrrier broken ...

SONG OF THE GREEKS

... A And the vengeance of ages has whetted its blade. Earth may hide-waves engulpl-fire consulue us, But they shall not to slavery doom us' If thev rule, it shall be o'er our ashes and graveG; But we've smote them already with fire ou the waves, And new ...

EXTRACTS FROM A JOURNAL

... inhabitants having had a short gleam of~free- dom and 'prosperity, feel by experittce the differ-s ence between bondage and slavery. In place or of being obliged to buy their goods ht a high price ci from the small stock which was sparingly husbanded en ...

THE THEATRE

... thle name of Celio,, -o h to assumne the 'pert of her intended husband. 11er lover,r if in the mcan time, returns from slavery, disguised as an 5 Ahyssiuian, and is it Cited to wvitaness thle mnovi no 1ttals of Ulirmoete. As may be imlaginled the anystery ...

OPENING OF THE EXHIBITION

... reach of every the one the power of Studying scoat the fiumest geniuses hald pro- tha, duced. l'ronm this realm,' sunk in slavery, but frons wh ich ly I hie hoped it wa* destined soon to rise, the nioble lord had roe- tiec cued monuments of taste, mhich ...

THEATRICAL RECOLLECTIONS

... 51&sail, chiefly coastringa u, vessels ; cmlf the Spaniards are so alarmed bV thec tl ret-i eveitmt, an te redul Prospects of. slavery, iF taken, ei r-that neo the vessels cars get a crew to proceed to Mr Bea. The ifeet appeared off' Barcelona; froni the 20thl ...