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A STORY OF HALLOWEEN

... ALL RIGHTS R.ESERVEI>. A STORY OF HALLOWEEN. By HARWOOD BRIERLEY. The aukld 1:udwife's Oveelhordet nits Am. round an)' roundiriie An' niany Li(i 'and 1h1qSes5f nu;03 Are t here that night decided. -Burns. October was dying. but not quite soundlessly. ...

Poet's Corner

... 'Veit's (tin I., 11 . I ?. . . .1 A LEGEND OF HALLOWEEN. Under the cliffs at Whitby, when the great tides lsnd- ward flow, Under the cliffs at Whitby, when the 52eat iinds land. ward blow, When the long billows heavily roll o'er the harboqr bar, And the ...

THE COURT

... THE COURT. Balmoral, November; The Queen drove out yesterday with Princess Beatrice. In the Hallowe'en was celebrated by the servants and tenants, who carried torches ia procession from the West Lodge to the front of the Castle, where a bonfire was lit ...

Original

... to kall-yarda green 1^ For stalks to try their fate unseen, Pr But more especially af Jean.t pr S Who burnt her nuts on Halloween. It Oh! what a crowd of visions rise. o, 0 Distinct and vivid to my eight, Imagination now supplies That crowning scone the ...

POETRY

... Where at dim ligrht is faintly beaniss On a silent and shladowvless band. I can ne'er forget that glonmin, When I tried the Hallowe'en spel- When I heard that fearful omen The toll of a funeral bell. I have felt life's joys ere over With me since tlat fatal ...

LITERATURE

... notes on the Scottish Halloween which are not without their value even to the ethnologist and the antiquarian The Scotch Halloween, as held in the solitary farmhouse and described by Burns, differed considerably from the Halloween of our villages sad smaller ...

Poetry

... the th height, abl Struck and foundered In the offlug, with her aecred goal In is il sight. the And the man who dares on Hallowe'en, on the black Vlab to wit watch, mal Till the ?? on St. H ilda's shrine, the midnight moon- - . beams eatc e, ue a And calls ...

SCOTTISH SONG AND STORY

... many of our friends who were born up North beyond the border, who keenly appreciated and thoroughly enjoyed the Grand Hallowe'en Concert supplied by Mr Kennedy for the delectation of his patrons. The programme was divided into two parts, the first ...

Published: Saturday 05 November 1892
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 747 | Page: 17 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS FOR THE WEEK

... Friday, DON CESAR OF BAZAN-With ERNESTINE AND GEORG. GETTE.-To conclude with every eveninganew ballet, by the author of Halloween, called THE SHEPHERD AND SHEPHERDESS; or, the Boys of Kilkenny. Supported by Messrs. Milano, Williams Griffiths, Walbourn ...

THE DRAMA MUSIC, ETC

... entertainment ever proe segtedadin the colonies; and after. a fortnig1m'a run it was replaced by the Scotch ballet Of: Halloween,! which icon- tanedtoo MUcht pantoisee fr Th elibourne auitence, and consequently did not SW ee..siml~ar..success. Oa-thi ...

A POEM ON ROBERT BURNS

... Death says- Noo dinna fear me; But I Dr. Hornbook' and his pills You maunna let them near you. Things dlone and seen on Halloween, He tells us a' about them: What Scotch or Irish man pretends To question them or. doubt them? Manll bowlhe tells o' charms ...

SCOTTISH SONG AND STORY

... many of our friends who were born up North beyond the border, who keenly appreciated and thoroughly enjoyed the Grand Hallowe'en Concert supplied by Mr Kennedy for the delectation of his patrons. Thle programme was divided into two parts, the first ...

Published: Saturday 05 November 1892
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 751 | Page: 17 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture