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Hull Packet

NoveMBER 20, 1846. SPE NTLY Speak gently !-——It is betéeer faz To rule by love than fear. Speak gentiy !—let

... NoveMBER 20, 1846. SPE NTLY Speak gently !-——It is betéeer faz To rule by love than fear. Speak gentiy !—let not harsh words mar The good we might de here! Speak gently ! —Love doth whisper low The vows that true hearts bind : And gently Friendship’s ...

Published: Friday 20 November 1846
Newspaper: Hull Packet
County: Yorkshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 620 | Page: 7 | Tags: none

Theatre has not been well attended, generally dable exertions of the Manager to produce variety, and the ..

... Theatre has not been well attended, generally dable exertions of the Manager to produce variety, and the speaking, during the past week, notwithstanding the lau- respectability of a stock company, its members, some performers of conaiderabie talent. This ...

Published: Tuesday 04 December 1827
Newspaper: Hull Packet
County: Yorkshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 2266 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

THE foreign news of the week has not been, politically speaking, of much interest. A report, however, connected

... VJMC1Ct anti Alumber fatrCturp. HULL: TUESDAY, ,NTOVEmBEf 17, 1829, I.. THP foreign news of the week has not been; politically speaking, of much interest. A report, however, connected vas, with the future destinies of Greece, has given rise to some the discussion ...

Published: Tuesday 17 November 1829
Newspaper: Hull Packet
County: Yorkshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 9005 | Page: 3 | Tags: News 

Poetry

... -~7 I SPEAK GENTLY. Speak gently !-It iQ better Sas To rule by tove than fear. Speak gently I-let not harsh words muar The good we might do here I Speak gently I-Love doth avhisper low The vows that true hearts bind: Ands gently Friendsh!p'g accents flow ...

li'oms.onOuut

... lectures, which he has a sort of indefinite idea will serve his purpose, and thrusts it in head and shoulders to speak for itself. Speak for it himseif, in truth, he cannot—he does not understand his author (whom therefore, with strange assurance, he ...

Published: Friday 07 January 1848
Newspaper: Hull Packet
County: Yorkshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 468 | Page: 5 | Tags: none

v. IRELAND

... victims to its maliguity. THE POTATO CROP. The accounts respecti the potato crop receiy are of a two-fold character—several speak confiden of the re-a nce of the destructive disease of | year; while others, indeed the great majority, p nounce the crop to ...

Published: Friday 30 July 1847
Newspaper: Hull Packet
County: Yorkshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 232 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

THE SCHOOLMASTER

... misapplied. I speak not of those who have, by the aid of the first chapter of St. John, out-jockeyed Apollo, though mounted upon Pegasus, and have with Mr. Hamilton, beat learning herself at leap- frog, by fairly vaulting over her head ;-I speak not of those ...

Published: Tuesday 06 May 1828
Newspaper: Hull Packet
County: Yorkshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 496 | Page: 4 | Tags: News 

> «*»* lli

... spiritual watchinan, uj his voice like a as the prophet speaks, to If the riest should vomit trumpet a nd spare not? up the Euc! harist (that is, the Lord of Glory, if Mr. O'Connell’s “living speaking is to be be- lieved) if the Priest should vomit up the ...

Published: Friday 06 December 1839
Newspaper: Hull Packet
County: Yorkshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 1708 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

end identified a debtor named Dim>- with the tarnkey, ‘who assaulted him ; but was not able es one of

... identified a debtor named Dim>- with the tarnkey, ‘who assaulted him ; but was not able es one of the person whe was with com- to speak to any of the others. the notice, corroborated this plainant when he went to serve statement..The directed depositions to ...

Published: Friday 22 March 1833
Newspaper: Hull Packet
County: Yorkshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 54 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

THE MURDER IN ST. GILES'S LONDONAPPREHENSION OF THE MURDERER

... to speak to the prisoner's identity. Mr. Oldhan, the cutler, who sold the knife, and his daughter who vast; with him in the shop, were convinced that the prisouier was the person they had seen. Mrs. Hall, the landladv of the house, could not speak positively; ...