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GULF IT DOWN, JOHNNY

... mutilation of his person, the tuin of his pro- yer-t-far.d seven yea¢ imprisonment, whesi he was released by the Parliamnentgry army, and lived to see the dowsial aid deca- pitation of the blessed MlartyXr. t ?? whose partiality to the STUARTS is notorious ...

LITERARY NOTICES

... either for or against him ; and that as to numbers, a miserable body of uinidisciplined men penetrated into the heart of the land with scarcely any sort of spontaneous opposition, support, or exertion of influence on the part of rank and property. There ...

LORD BYRON'S TRAGEDY

... him.: He attacked, though unsuccessfully, the fortress of Ceuta, Which Is considered impregnable on the land side, in A. D. 1805, with an immense army, at the period when he gave his port of Santa Cruz in South Barbary, on the confines of the Sahara, to ...

Review of Literature.—Science and the Arts

... rreneh proo, wlihen the t htliguace' of Ollo neigie mul-rs, the languace of :)liusscaa an 1 o, S!. Pivrre, is contessel. on all lands, to es.:cd our own in the tcrseness andi concinnity of ex- u e-,iin, an(d in the neat and delicate turns of its amuorous p ...

Review Literature—Science, and the Arts

... harvest may yet produce an abundant 5l°Uahir Wheats upon cold, unsotnd land, which had in course Opti i,, most, are vrsit)ly recovering both strength and colour. I I lows and lands for the springerops have been worked withlie fal labour and difficiulty; ...

Review of Literature—Science, and the Arts

... lived, your army in Egypt would have perished. DLlad that imbecile Mlenou attacked you on your landing with twenty thousand men, as he might have ione, instead of ithe division Lanusse, your army would have beet only a meal for them. Your army was seventeen ...

THE WELCOME

... gathering- heard~but not heard fof the fight. Yes t.-'tii iova protI4 and nstain'd as IL'e snow, Like the streains of tjeir land that. ternaly gow; 'Tis tlie'bur tt e ?? from sirtnmit and shor>, And !A Iyn embracing' . Monarch once more r - 'Port n}a-Chi(Ach ...

Poets' Corner

... .Tfiereisa strong ence, vvith the two Bow -street oflicers in the mansion. Alli'~enton Eel- lowes is also in thme mansion, land the Earl never gets omit in his carriage withiotit beinglatteasled by an offlicer. NVeie'1! Iimveenk' Bait for 1Pikes.-On Frislay ...

THE MIRROR OF FASHION

... part of the fqrniture will be sold this day and 't9t sgrfOW. The cnrrlaies aldo wiaes se reservod fWe Modday. e tAATOWN OF WOMAN. 'g sI ofiE'S WLivgs OF THE AN GSLS.'. You both reniember well the day ,:''W ,I finto Evends new-.made bowers, re,,wbom all ...

VARIETIES

... decrepit old ,woman, of appearance mitch corresponding ivith the popular notion ofea witch; she. hnstily collected a bundle Of sticks fromthe hedge~and was about tocarry them oflf; 'the farmer sprung from his concealmfent, and seized ibe old woman as-the nightly ...

THE MIRROR OF FASHION

... had never heard of Gretna I Green. That they should obtain such repute in a land of l Fancy, like Ireland-a land celebrated for miracles since the days of St. PATRICE-a land that has witnessed the feats of Father MURPHY, who caught the enemy's balls in ...

THE MIRROR OF FASHION

... dogging their -cVews? If so, they have a far greater power than that colm- plained of in the Army, and I think ought to be checked. I think no man is flogged in the Army without some kind of trial An OLD REAbER of the MORNING CHRONICLE. The following is a correct ...