Poetry

... I = .C .. O10Af tu g PROLOGUE 5'OP. TLHE ANNIVXRSARY CS BURS'b RISRTUDAV, CHLEBRAtyD BY THIS CUMBERLAND rNT9LMiEN RESIDExT IN LONDON, 1828, B' tfhe Brv. IV. Routledge, of the Rloyal Institution School, Far as we wander from our mountain home, Where forests darken, and where torrents foam; Where cliffon cliff, in wild confusion cast, Frowns at the fury of the winter blast; Where hill and mead ...

Literary and Scientific Notices

... * The ANetisise Portrasit Galleny, with Memoirs. Part 82. London! Fisher. 1833. Titss delightful publication, wve observe, is under the especial patronage of the K~ing, sand truly it is well worthy of it. The Portraits generally are of distinguished characters of the present or isumediately past generation, and are executed with the utmost skill and fidelity, while the biographical sketch ...

MAY MORN SONG

... MOAYRMNR SONG. ?? Malefenw Poems.) The grass Is wet with shinirg dews, The sliver bells hang on each tree, While opening Hower and bursting bud Breathe Incense forth unceasingly; The mavis pipes in greenwood shaw, The throstle glais the spreading thorn, And cheerily the biythsome lark Salutes the rosy face of morn. 1'%s early prime; And hark f hark ! hark I His merry chime Chirups the lark; ...

THE MISS-NOMERS

... THE MISS-NOIMERS. BY MRS. BARON WILSON. (From the Comic Offering.) Miss Brown is exceedingly fair, Bliss White is as brown as a berry, 'liss Black has a gray head of hair, 3 Miss Graves is a flirt, ever merry E Bliss Lightbody weighs sixteen stone, Miss Rich can scarce master a guinea, f Aliss Hare wears a wig, and has none, a And Aliss Solomon is a sad ninny! ( Miss Mildmay's a terrible scold ...

THE FASHIONABLE WORLD

... TilsE FlSIHION1ABLE IVORLD. A, i ,r, clSRlON¢4CU AspA ltTO ltti$ 'fins. r M5Ceties left Londt ,Zm;b1~Vtuetock on Satnlrde A1n carriage and sutr, ?? uya Patyq of ?? atrf the ibce't Windsor. Ith Queen, attended by the Marchioness ofEly, lb- ?? of Browplow with her company on D ?? the dejeanf given by her ladyship at her residence ,sgaYc sqtare Prince George of Cambridge, accom- i by ...

THEATRE ROYAL

... h The performances of last evening Commenced tits it Othello. Mr. Ternan played Othello, and Mr. Keean n lago. When we learned by the play VIlMs that these geii n tdemen were to alternate these two characters of the piece, d we learned it with regret. Not that we doubted the pover l- in either actor of doing justice to one, or it may be to either is of the characters, but that we ...

THE FASHIONABLE WORLD

... THE FASHIONABIE WORLD. | *Blt CItitOtfilA,1 AND AsT'ZOCor OF THE TIMES, HsNr FROM WALTER SCOTT. Siott, in convetaing with a 5. young man who was about to embark upon the peritl ou voyage of letters, in search of forture and fame, made to him tiis pithy remalik-it contains a volume:-1 Literature, my young friend ,'is a good staf, but a bad ?? Town. e Mir. Cottr's PQRTRAsI.-A grand dinner ...

LITERATURE

... LITERA TURE. THE DUBLIN UNIVERSITY MAGAZINE FOR FEBRUARY. We have just seen the second number of the 48 Dublin University MAgazin. ' and confess ourselves unable to dis- a cover any traces of th,,. ' century of experience which a contemporary declares Its jouthluleditore have brought to the task of conducting it. It is not, however, quite a beardless production, and, taking it in a more ...

THE FASHIONABLE WORLD

... ' A Dsllr C~iRONICLE AND AISMTRACT OF THE TI1e.5 ! WINDSOR, SU NDAY-Yebterday evening, shorrly after aix o'clock, their Majesties, es.orted by at party of the Royal Horse Guards, arrived at tbr Castte. Their Mijeaties were v preceded by three carriages, containing Prince George of c Cambridge and the Rev. Mr. Wood, Countess of Westmeath, Lord James O'Brien, Colonel Horace Seymour, Mr. Shiffner ...

THE FASHIONABLE WORLD

... 'A BtRIEF CHRONICLE AND ABSTRACT OP TUN5 TIMES, Their Majesties, attended by the Marchioness of Wet. meath and the Earl of Denbigh, left town in a carriage and four, on Thursday afternoon, to honour with their presenc thefite given by Sir Wathen Waller and Baroness Howe, at Pope's Villa, Twickenham. The Marquis of Lansdowne entertained some of the caE. net ministers at dinner on Wednesday ...

THE FASHIONABLE WORLD

... T1112 FA SIIOINABLE 4W @kl) A aiWF Ckl]LO.I5LEt A-ND AIIS'XACT ° THEIR MAJESTIES. X All On1 Monday their Majesties, accompanied by their g Highnesses the Duke of Gloucester and Prince Georg Cambridge, and attended by Lord Albemarle, Leord borough, Lo~d and. Lady Denhigh, Lord and Lady B caw low, Sir A. Barnard, Sir H. Wheatley, Sir J. Reynett , visited the Exhibition of the Royal Academy. ...

CUPID AND MINERVA

... CUPID AND AIlNERVA. MY THOIMAS MOO'1E, ESQ. As Love, one summer eve, was straying, Who should he see, at that soft hour, But young Minerve, gravely playing Her flute within mi olive bower. I need not say, 'tis Love's opinion That, grave or merry, good or ill, The sex all bow to his dominion, As woman will be woman still. Though seldom yet the boy bath giver To learned dames his smiles or sighs ...