THEATRE ROYAL

... TIIEATRE ROYAL, Mrs Biashe's return to the Ed4inburgh stage, and to a professional lire, was oil 1Monnay evetiilg bail. edi with aill the warmnth ard ki:illincss of fecliugi which could possibly be evine~d by a brilliaft antit crowd- ci] audience. Amr Bushe, durinjg her residlence here some eight or nine years ngo. wYa3 n tirdrremal favour rite, andi thle burst or welcomie jiinlurcd by the re- ...

ORIGINAL POETRY

... POLIPY. L. R L. BiV D, N'li. RIDD)ELL.. Trint art. gnne. sirl for ever. beloved L. E. L.. 'Thon art gone, with choice spirits for ever to dwell Bleqlneathing to mortals, thougih brief was thy stay, A memory to live In its beanty for aye. Iw eep for the harp t hat ]lan' sonthed me so oft, '.\lid the diseords of ?? with its breatbings so soft; I wep those bereaved onl a turbulent ses, But. I ...

LINES WRITTEN ON SCARBRO' CASTLE HILL ON A REMARKABLY FINE DAY

... LINES WRITTEN oN SCARBRO' CASTLE HILL , ON A REMARKABLY FINE DAY. . Hail to thee, Ocean! bail nature's fair queen; Hail to thy blue waves, and caverns unseen Hail to the charm of thy unexplor'd wonders Hail to the sigh of thy undying thunders. Who can behold thee, thou gem of the skies, With heart unattun'd, or with unillum'd eyes ? Can think of the splendour and might that are thine, And not ...

Literary Notices

... Uiterarp W-0tirro. Till' T~'RAPPiEI~t OF' 'THE M\ISSOURI. ?? 'lie aeccunr voluitte (if Mr. 13entley's Smanck rd Li- brary contairts Warshtington myvla's celebrated svatk vat I d ?? Astorriat. It is at series ofI ?? and wonrdorfulI pictureso, or raller skotchtes, witicr, if thea English Ihard re tnythring, of Uerrman enrltriatniii, would produce a, dirasteutt eflects upon our youth ats thle ...

Poetry

... - ?? Dcrtrp. i j.i I I P . III. At Barciel, seinr Cantmbridge. MeTn's lifu is like i; vinii'tes daIy- Some ?? ?? (iMid tI ny (3tlkens to Ii iti ii n It ?? 0cc' ;,il ?? I be oldest 1!1o11 buat saps end igoes to bed Long is his b liie wl ho liitnies (ot tlhe de^v- \VIbo goes tI le soonest hias tlil! l-st to poy )elltli is the i'oiter, seaine il)w' 7 01i oil tick, '.od some, silcs, Iltist pay the ...

CONCERT AT THE AMPHITHEATRE

... CONCERT A? THE AMIPIILTIIEATflE. nd. (Fron a Correspendent.) 0 int Our townsmen are much indebted to Mr. James Ash- a! , ton for his enterprise in attempting to re-establish the e-I concerts. on a scale worthy of the town. In doing this ] re- Ir. Aslhton has not, perhaps, succeeded, either to the ex- A tent of his own wishes or those of the public, but he has !30 dome enough to show that there ...

LITERATURE

... I . VICARDEN'S MrSCELLANY, NO. 1. Jan., 1839. A healthy spirit appears to pervade this new periodical, and the services of some able writers have been secured to ornament its pages. It general tone is serious and instructive; but the Floating Remniniscenses ofthe Old Sailor, and the Haunted Manor House, show that the lovers of lighter reading will have no reason to turn away from its contents ...

Poetry

... 'A t t wallld ;'-tfti;;;i a ??Dtuo Wat'll .ta --lued d Im .. ' lF,toa waed forth the h wean eftda wath pua* , T- sether firt byot-4 bee uon'ai jee..di'd .. - iteF eatx t o ree ar sed lb brigbtta e ?? t hoo s. Farto a deept gloom aFtt bleMyabearei %Low ' td nit he, l ouI ithsff'otoh * apgatuldeiotth1e^Gt~tAuthor or itahgl s bTna sotlCDtOt th e h~ltli't **aeoldett end vwihi ithr3 as pfor ...

Poetry

... .. ?. ? % . , 1!1? ? .; - 7 . - ? I - ? . ?? .1 21a ?? ?? iwottvp- , ?? . ?? : ? AN ARbSTIC. F eaylesiand, bold maintain thypart, K nconpase'd by a glerious heart; A! psitriot baind with c'oraie high It esohled-to o ntoqueit r toddib G ives forth'tbe eniaptbring battle ry- U jnirr and order, lew and peace,- 8 urround our camp t' insure success. O ?? ?? ยข hmedonia's Thlatlesatemenclosea O n ...

LITERATURE

... THE MAGAZINES AND MONTHLIES. Frazer's Magazinefor January. There are different degrees and varieties of dishonesty, as well as of all other offences against the moral ]aw~ Thus Frazer commences his Nintee-nth Volume, and, verily the sentiment is Proved to a tittle by its own author. Dr. Hook's Call to Union, on the Principles of the English Reformation, is the subject upon which our worthy ...

THEATRE ROYAL

... THE &TRE ROYAL. The new tragedy of Zaraffa, or tee Slave King, was pro- duced for the first time last night, and, notwithstanding that many of the ciicumstaaces under which it was got up were unfavourable in a very great degree, it was received with the most decided success. All parts of the house were unusually crowded, and the bursts of applause which i almost every scene drew forth were as ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... The Life of Thomas Reynolds, Esq. By his Son, Thomas Reynolds. 2 vols. Hooper. The years that bring the philosophic mind are cer- tainly not the years to which Mr Thomas Reynolds the younger has attained. All philosophy with him resolves itself into the fact that he is the son of Mr Thomas Reynolds the elder. His filial piety is in- disputable and exemplary. A respect for it, even in its ...