THE FASHIONABLE WORLD

... THB FASHIONABLE fWORLD. do A BRIEF CHRONICLE AND A13ILACT OF THE TIMES. The Marquis and Marchioness of Downshire, ac- companied by Lord Hillsborough and Lord William Hill, arrivedon Wednesday at Gresham's Hotel. They dined yesterday with Sir John and Lady Byng. The noble party are on their wayto visit his Lordship's estates at Edenderry. Prince Leopold left his residence at Claremont, on ...

THE YOUNG SAILOR

... THE YOUNG SAILOR, 1 O'er the glad maters of the dark blue sea, His soul as hebtndless, and his thoughts as free; Far as the billows rage, the ocean's foam, Survey his empire and -behold his homne-Byran. his home is on the waters, where the many billows swell; For they arelike his spirit bold, that loves them passing well. HeT is borne o'er them joyously, the gallant and the free; And hopes, ...

PHILOSPHICAL INSTITUTION, PARK-STREET

... I PIIILOsPCAINSTTUTION, PARKESTREBT. I .- _ _ ?? AmE- Asv- alit. WESLEY'S LECTURtES ON MTUSIC. Mr1. W. commenced his second lecture with some observations on the soulrces aid efibts ofimusical prejudice. He read Locke's definitioli of prejudice, ndteprceeded to remark that no art or science was free ho~rn its influence. 1l akontosuet inl geomet~ry dispute the propriety of using the termn ...

THE EXILE

... T1HE EXILE. (FROM5 THE LA- aS OF ,e10. s joBY ;N DIS o ) Acnoss the sun-lit ocean, He gazed with tearfil eye, And oft, with sad emotion, He heav'd a trem'lous sigh: His sorrows were unlspoken, But he pined in silence onl For his heart was nearly broken, And his hopes of joy were gone. Those hopes which lie had cherish'd In his boyhood's eager day, Each aifter each had perish'd From his ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... (NAPIER's History of the War is the Peninatda.) Tors is a work of great interest and instruction, written with maniffest honesty of purpose and vigour of judgment, but radically vicious in the ambition of its style. There is too generally throughout it a strain- F ing at ?? in points, bold brevities, and the surprise of new phrasings, which divert the mind of the reader from the matter to the ...

Poetry

... Vacttrp. THE RAINBOW. BY THE LATE AfRS. T. COBBOLD, OF 1PSWrreV. (From Ackermann!8 Juvenile Forget me Net.) Behold where shines, id glorious show Qf lucid tints, the painted bow ! But trust not to the varying light, As evanescent as 'tis bright. Turn where the sun'seffulgent blaze Ulumes the heaven with-4!urer rays- Rays that from gloom a~d midnight borrow Fresh glories to adorn the morrow. ...

THE MIRROR OF FASHION

... 7iHE MIRROR OF FASHIaO .1 [FROM TIll COURT CIRCULAIR.] A Deputation of six of the principal Merchants of Livcr- pool, headed lby Mr Huskisson and General Gascoyne, the Members for that tonlm, had a conference with the Duke of Wellington )esterday, at the'Treasury. The object ef the interviewv was to oltitai ttic revival of a mode of paying the Landing Waiters of the Customs at the port of ...

DRURY-LANE THEATRE

... DRURY-LANE THEATRE'. Last night Mr. KEAN appeared as Lukc, in the play of Richles, ia charactei' whvichl lhe has not performned fer several years past. The splendid success of this actor during 1is early career, in MASSINGER'S Newo 7VJiy to Pr, *la J)et ts (the last act of whiclh nearlv threwv Lord Byron into hyste- rics, andl did absolutely make Mrs. GLOVER faint), natll- rally turned his ...

Original

... IOrigual. THE TIXllER ELrc&& from a Letter addressed to a Friend Is th COuntry. My friend, we are here in a terrible mess, Assail'd on all sides with complaints of distress ; lach trying the burden to shift from his shoulders, With but one exception-I mean the fundbolddrs. They have bonds upon all our possessions, they say. Which like Shylock of old, they'll compel us to pay: Their title, they ...

DESPAIR

... | D. Al n T- - ., - . ?? ?? .. - .. . .. . I. . by A. B. PrieE, A-tbor of the { Bedouins, (FROM THE LOTUS.), 0 chide me, not that I love to roam WheTe the breaker is flinging its cold white foam, And the sea-crag looms o'er my lonely way, Like the, shadows that fall at the close of day Arid the curlew wbeels o'er the dreary sky, And the wind, like a spirit, goes moaning by. There's a tone ...

SATAN,—A POEM

... - T- PM . - ol SA'AN,--At Po£m .- I BY ltOOSDT MONTGO0ERY. This poem is divided into three books, each con- sisting of a speech, or rather soliloquy, of the Arch- fiend. Tbhe subject of these soliloqiesi cflesl expressed in the mots~rfl xcd; that to the frst book being from, It!iltorn, Earth's kingdoms and their glory. the second is fromn Wordsworth, n On Alan? on Nature, and on human life, ...