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Northern Star and Leeds General Advertiser

Literature and Reviews

... he wee the, unacquaintedtihs doeeredii his duty to attend one of the lectures, in which thett w le ittle, comparatively speaking, objectiunoble ; andi at this Close after tthaiming the Socialiste far their iviilty, informed them that, 'h.'aoughl ceould ...

Poetry

... 'Tes to see your children weak With their usothers pine and peak, W hen, the winter winds are bleak: They are dying whilst I speak. 'Tis to hunger for such diet, As the rich muan i a his riot Caste to the tat dogis that lie Surieitiog benetlth his eye. 'Tis ...

Literary Extracts

... t'eactlke'y '.se a 1X1501 Oc kiX, ysts 'srĀ¢. Lafayette was no orator-if by oratory We mean that emphiftic 'and sonorous mode of speaking which t stuns the hearers, mnd lets nothing but wind enter . their ears. 'He had a serious yet familiar conversa- tionalistle ...

Poetry

... 0 lie ! Ill-fated aaworld, which mnakes the fate it mourns I Ah! (?vririi) -Hurl thee back thy scorn: let me livo yet, To speak tho birsting passions of my soul. [W7ritiln.] I Ere tilth shall close his klon. God ! that I could But spread before mankind's ...

Literary Extracts

... offencd. lhesn I have marcied all tlsis, I have thought, if we could but carry auway our rcompany-snilcs to thc home1c fireside, speak always in thc gentle and rer- suasive tonies made useO of in tile evening paicty, ansd move aloug the domestic walk with that ...

LITERARY SCRAPS

... of which you are ignorant, especially in the presence of those to whom it is familiar. If it be not always in your power to speak to the pur- pose, it certainly is to hold your tongue ; and though thousands have remembered with pain their garrulity, few ...

Literary Extracts

... com- placently at the president and ditto at the party Mr. Presideint, hem, and geitlemen-unaccustomed as I am to public speaking, and unaware of two honour you have lone me in my absence-hem-I say, done me inl may absesco-len-I am at a loss to express ...

REVIEW OF LITERATURE

... facts, no words can do jus. tice to the horror and amazement that gathered in his face. Three several attempts he muade to speak, and at the last had managed to articulate a few words; sud- denly the sounds grew faint-they ceased-his eyes gradually closed ...

HISTORY OF THE GENERAL CONVENTION OF THE WORKING CLASSES;

... to what tribunal could the injured appeal, if not to the P'eople's Parliameni ? In the case of Burns there was little to speak of, becausn it was the appeal of twelye persons, who, if I re- member rightly urged no argument either that the majority were ...

Literary Extracts

... renders it inde- cent for creditable people even of the lowest order to appear without. A linen shirt,for example, is, strictly speaking, not a necessary of life. The Greeks and Roomans lived, I suppose, very comfort- ably, though they had no linen. But in the ...

Literary Extracts

... men are permitted to reap their appropriate chastisement, in the inherent principle oft eir transgression. Sacred Writ, in speaking of its ovnI iinteudc d use, says that it was written for the instruction of all generations; those to come, as well as the ...