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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 ...

POETRY

... P O ETRY. .. 1'~ I, THlE POOR CHIRISTIAN AND TIIE CL-IIRCH. lie hoiln incutred a long arrear, And must despair to pay.-CoIvPER9 To tbe poor tle gospel is Lnot] preachled. Howv gloriolis Zion's courts appear, Thie piots poor malt cries: stand bacek, youl knave, you're in arrear '11e, Mantager replies. Pooi: CIlISTIAN. 'Thle genius of the Christiall code Is Charity-humility;'' M.A;NAGER ...

POETRY, ORIGINAL AND SELECTED

... _ _ _ is__ , r zI ORIGINAL A1ND SELECTED. LA 'FRAPPE. Oh ! let us haste, excilims the guide, *VWhile yet the son is high Ynn drearv forest pass with speed; Tilee fimed I Il Trappu' is nigh. Alas ! for him whom night o'erzakes, A tI bideS its lone cot seek; He finds, 'tif true, a hospice there, That makes his lire's-blood teak. In its dreal and deep dark glens Thte armed assassin lies, On ...

POETRY, ORIGINAL AND SELECTED

... ,;l I ?? N' ?? -.1 -.fit t ?, ?? ?? OIfGINAL AND SELEcTED. AN EVEVING THOUGHT. (Fromt the Chamdeonea 04- v kwoon behind my ?? calm *ny, ' ' 'ho willing waters close again : 'It laves no lie of brokeri sqpray Along the scarcely ruffled piflin. * So let nie gihie thlrough peacefuI l We, Bequeatiling not oe satl Iegret To aught I ve loved, nor thought of strire, For, in fdrgiviltg, I forget ! 1 ...

LITERATURE

... l _ _~~~~~~~~~~~~~~1 POPULAR HISTOaY or PRIESTCaAFT in all Ages and Nations, by WILLIAM HoWvTT. London: Effing- ;,ham Wilson, p. p. 276. Wrhat such a mal as William Howitt should have no object in exposing the evils of priesteraft, but to serve true reiligion and true liberty, will probably be believed by all except those, who if an angel from heaven were to denounce the State-creed, would be ...

THE FANCY BALL

... 7 - ?? On this as, on former occasions of the kind, the mma ie amusements and enjoyments of the Festival con- We ie cluded with a grand Fancy Dress Ball, on Friday on I he evening, at the Town-hall, the use of which was V it kindly granted by the Mayor and Common Council cau to the Festival Committee for the occasion. This den truly unique and fascinating exhibition has always Str( been ...

POETRY, ORIGINAL AND SELECTED

... l~~~N ORIGINAL AND SELECTED. A P[CTURE OF MORNING. t(roni Wo 1I ,an, tletnl ,ie oqI.Rife, Zj Rober13orogormery. Arid list, from out yon village *1 Upon the breeze, in broken swell, 'I'he gloings-on of litl begin To charin lhe enr with social din. 'TIhe creak of hill ascdiing wain, Tlhe shout ofs ome exultilig swain, 'I'le watcih.dog baying far behind, The mill-sounds hoatse upon the wind, ...

POETRY, ORIGINAL AND SELECTED

... OBtIGIN1L AND SELECTED. THE LIFE BOAT. BY MISS AGNES STRICCKLAND. The life-boat ! the life-boat ! when tempests are dark, She's tbe beacon of hope to the foundering bark, When, midst the wild roar of the hurricane's sweep, The minute-guns boom, like a knell on the deep. The life-boat! the life-boat I the whirlwind and rain, And white-cested breakers, oppose ber in vain; Her crew are resolved, ...

CONCERT HALL

... CONLRTI 114Ln I WFD'ESD:'r -nj~ t .r - --,,, A r 8 l Symphny No.8. . rA . t Cho5 us *;' ()h lattier whouloo n * . '.*'- Overture .. . . .. f.ilngP. bt, Powet Chorus . .. .Dotia nobig.w-' Cymph~ony, Oplis 6..,. 'ass ND, T' Ocertu re .. .. . '1 ,,oi fa , lO f t~uche * The above ir a list of the Picer which vwere performed at th 'seal iti nesday evening lat, witladre, e racter of the ...

Poetry

... pvtftv* . HUMANITY TO THE DUMB CREATION. - We wrish- that some of our novelists and posts would imitate the example of the writer of the following lines. with the view of fostering kind feelings towards tha dumb treation. The amiable bliss Cullen, in her interesting novel of Mornton, has set an example which other writers would do well to imitate; she never omits any occasion tof inculcate ...

FEMALE FASHIONS FOR OCTOBER

... I SEA-stDn ?? of Indian jaconot muslin, corsage su a of the peignoir kind, and gigot sleeves. Mantelet of pink grosl1a e de Naples, covered with black blond lace; it fals low and deep a a Aver the shoulders and back of the bust; the fronts, of the do e scarf kind, descend to the knee, and are drawn in at the waist m ., by a knot of gauze riband to eorrespond, a similar knot closes r the ...

Poetry

... . VoOrg. TO A MOTHER, ON THE DEATH OF HER CHILD. th ~w 'v Oh mourn not the dead ! the silent dead I at Who rest in the cold grave's cheerless bed;, in For theirs is tile calm no storm can break, As placid and sweet as the slumb'ring lake. Oh mourn not the dead! though damp and dull Is the home of the once so beautiful, NV They feel not the nightly dews that fall On the turf that roo:s their ...