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Poetical Selections

... c,, I %clecti6no, VI ro:pri ?? -? 922 Mr finc besi drc OwI 41ie fror exp I W11C of: Del scaf of b ban, Ersa creis trial uom tion For itit esil som adyv Gat Df f thet WoIs tas Pi nig For con puri gua We I ertill oeal a the' ism bas C of 4 she Fir Ow n v Vict pres ap I and the, acc all can witl the ohs but the nsc Met 3! auN 'O;the SfI'SoU TT. ' S wOUSE. OjH,,4 F.BELIEVERS. ,uNoC iTTE' or ...

THEATRICAL RIOT

... I THEP&TRICAL RIOT. °t1.A sele ofdisorder and tun-ltul etheatre last iht, almost as on- the tempest of the morning. The 61l, or the dog of Montargis, -as the I Wihich had been given out for represen- I I ?? of some misunderstand- I ebe patetitee and the proprietor of the' I' in, the piece, as to the terms on r 'nices of the dog were to be had, the: glot go forward, and The Miller and t IPet ...

[ill] Selections

... pooctrcal %dertionl. Ij ?? i Be (Fl i thile Morsing Chrosaicie.) St ROYAL PROCLAMATION. 0b6 To the go°d Citizens of Paris. allh an Brave lads of Paris! never fear, for Though Blucher's force be drawing near; Bc I, Joseph Bonapar e, am here. The Ernpresq, I amn glad to say, ani Aiud little ome, hasve run away, To0 live' to figh' al ther ?? iof But 1. C'n, Jseph, still remain; ral I v h. viii -i ...

Poetical Selections

... pacticalt~, Wl{g !tr. ' p _ _. - p__ _ ith LOID BYRON. ce. The Mornirg Post has given it out that a Peer of independent ?? is to make a motion in the. Lords, at its r.soi meeting, for calling Lord Byron F to account for writing two verses on the subject of the PRineess C.harlotte steeping. Precedents are ch glanced at- and the noble Lord is threatened to h iave all his high privileges ...

LET TRUTH PREVAIL

... LET TRUTH PREVAIL. c la, Jrriacn for, and sun1g at, the Anniversary Dinner of her the Independent Debating Society. Id, Wl;en blest creation rose from night, ted And heaven posr'd forth a flood of light, the When, in the youthful mind of man, ich A search for mental light began- s- Fair TRuTrH descended from the skies To make God's reasoning creatures wise, vs And Angels sang-her birth to ...

Poetical Selections

... ?? M!mm?, - poctical 19clectiono. INVOCATION TO JOANNA SOUTHCOTT! I can call spirits from the vasty deep. Why so can I; or so can any man; But will they come when you do call for them ? a Henry IV. (Fromt the Chamipion.) Joanna !-Joanna Do give a poor man-a D Reply, without shuffling or guile-O! h And tell me what reason, r 0So late in the season, n Keeps back the miraculous Shiloh. c ii The ...

Original Poetry

... Original Poelry. - at SPanSSECiAN STANZAS. th *Who, when the morn breathes freshness, and around ti- Ic Reviving verdure spreads, and Life awakes, P' st As fi-om tbe chains of darksome night unbound;- % Who, as he roves green vales or rooded lakes, I And towns and men and all their care forsakes ;- bs YWho doth not, lovely Freedom, then, confess w That the rude peasant inid tihe barren brakes, ...

Poetical Selections

... .ppdkal %electioO. A TALE, BIythe Rev. F. Bishop. No plate bad John and Joan to hoard, Plain folk in humble plight ; One only tankard -crowh'd their board, And that was fill'd each night; Along whose inner bottom sketch'd, In pride of chubby grace, Some rude engraver's hand had etch'd A baby angel's face. John swallow'd first a moderate sup; But Joan was not like John; For,when her lips once ...

Poetical Selections

... pogtital %ercttanO. ?? V. The following beautiful lines (written in. a severe Frost, and strong Haze, on Sunday Morning, January 2, 1S14,) are copied fromn the Sheffield Iris. How drear and awful is this solitudet Nature herself is surely, dead, and'o'er Her cold and stiffen'd corpse a windiing. sheet, Of bright unsullied purity, is thrown. -lonw still she lies t she smiles, she breathes no ...

ORIGINAL

... 6I d -IX . *N~ RltAD1N'G ThE' P05555 OF EDW. RUSHTON. (,.Trittte ins Nov. 1806, noi first pullished.) Uet other Bards attune benal'lyre,! lease out its.oiC0,;s5d$..55M4 striga for hire 'By other ?? c.wseatley pta ,tied. To crown soe Here purer thopesempiqthe,. e 9f~I page, No tumpetsbay D jog J°Sh engage; No venal flattpnng$8tws tlwse bqnest laa,. Unawed they centze,.and unbqught they .pra.se ...

ORIGINAL POETRY

... Lines occasioned by the vote of the Town-Hall- Meeting, Liverpool, July. 19, 1814, to Petition Parliament on the General Abolition of the Slave Trade. Thine is the triumph, Truth !-thy strength impart, And give expression to my bounding heart! Thine is the triumsph, Truth !-it is from thee Man feels, and owns, his fellow should be freie! Still, mighty Truth, I see thee unconfined! Still thou ...

THE CREED OF CARDINAL [ill]

... TfrN CRESEa OF CARDINAL MAVRY, Credo quod est. n, When Bonaparte was in power, r- I said i' be wasa God, Sir1 nu ,flis fortune changing witmhe Fla -ur, lit By change is not so od *Sir. ait I own, wbatever names prevail, I aiway; would the civil: And would not, if celeetials fail, Be vulgar to the Ig Thetford Festival to Three Thousand Persons._ A Not more thao half the bread provided on ...