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THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... outvie A lovely Woman on a fiery horse ; which he pronounces to be The mingled charm of gentleness and force. It seems to us, that there is always something which jars against one's sense of the feminine and gentle, in seeing a woman on a fiery horse ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... through hell Rejuicing the Eumenides. S - ?? slow Our father; she made thee the scorn of slaves; Me (son of him who ruled this land and more) She made an outcast o . a Would I Htad been so For ever! ere such vengeance ?? Electra. 0 that Zeus Haid let thy ...

Literary Scraps

... chance than seemed jo at that moment to be theirs of receiving support in in time. For there was not a private in the British 1e army who was ignorant of the conformation of the Ln minds of those by whom their movements were re- to gulated; indeed, in such ...

BELFAST POWDER MAGAZINE

... is a Tory succeeding a Tory. Rusuiuvn AND WlZFB.-CUtaO[s CASu.-On Thursday, in the P401ce Court, Edinburgh. a middle-aged woman, with a child in her arins, wag placer at the bar charged with stealing £5 in the ?? of an old man named Grant. Sie pleaded ...

A ROMANCE OF REAL LIFE

... of which, having become uinable to perform active duty, he rX sumed the trade which lie had leirned before he en- tered the army, and became tailor to the regiment.- He had; in the former part of his exile, written many letters to his wife, but had never ...

THE ITALIAN OPERA

... being the Fast Dav at Edinburgh, our shores here enlivened by the landing of an extraordinary number of passengers from the steam boats. It was counted, that no less than 700 persons were landed here in the course of the day, and about 150 at Largo. Considerable ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... connection with that of Falk. land, as a supporter of that very measure, No one Was pretended that Hyde was not most active in the pursuit of Strafford,-it was Hyde who carried up the first message to the Lords about the army plot which forced the immediate ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... Napoieon found when he sounded their leading men on his extravagantly glorious scheme of restoring their people to the Promised Land. What other fruit could spring from that first cruel policy which had supplanted the honourable ways of ambition with the sole ...

Original

... an excuse for the glass. Mayt the reign of the Sovereign be blest to its close W With liberty, plenty, and peace; - May our armies and fleets on their laurels repose, f And faction and anarchy cease. Let the toast pass, &c. P But should foreign foes Interrupt ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... preference from foreign na- tions. These women were unwilling to abandon their own worship and superstitions: slaves in a strange land, they clung closely to the religion of their Clildliood and nation, and they entreated Solomon to secure to them religious ...

LITERATURE

... ju. j.o dicious advices to the East India Voynger, de- In' voted to the 1 Civil Service. The late boon to Ilo the Indian Army is investigated in two letters ; lit the Famine in India affords room for excellent to suggestions as to a subscription ...

Varieties

... la tracts of lands in less than one second of timo. Those who build castles in the air, cheaply purchase many a happy hour, which is nt dispicablo gain; for an hour of hap- piless is a great prize in our short term of life. Value of Land.-For a small ...