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NOTICES OF BOOKS

... - THE MAIIDEN MONAtReH'; or, Isalnd Queen. TICo ?? o h. Hastis, C re*. We Are iell pleasdd to have an 'epportuhity of corn- mencing ouireritiictl ar'wds ith'tile indtice of anovel as! unlike iiditn'nive'l iii 'its puipdse 'anad object dis'the do.: mains of nature's poet are unlike ahe stern realities of. ordinaty life. The author, or the authoress-for we ?? ?? that it is ahidly, tile ...

AN ADDRESS TO THE YOUNG MEN OF THE BRITISH ISLES

... AN ADDRESS TO THE YOUNG MEN OF I THE BRITISH ISLES. (o1. tbe SOOTIIIN STAll.) Speak then, whence come ye 1' a youth~rmade reply, l * Wearily, wearily o'er the boundless deap s We sail;-thou readeth well tile misery Told in these faded eyes, butminuch doth sleep d Within, which there this poor hleart !pves to keep; n Or dare not write on the dislhopored brow. 3, Even from our childhloot We ...

THE THEATRES

... COVENT GARDEN THsATRE.-The tragedy of J1tandtet was performed at this theatre on Monday night. It is a play better fitted for the closet than the stage, for it is of a reflective, rather than an active cha- racter, end lacks the stir and vividness of incident neces- sary to recommend it to an English audience. The action, what little there is, constantly halts in order to bring out the ...

THEATRICAL AND MUSICAL CHIT-CHAT

... THEATRICAL AND MUSICAL CHIT-CHAT, NATIONAL OPRIIA.-A conrespoundent, wh10 ?? self ?? A Lover of English Music, wishes to know why it is that we have no national opera ? Why, indeed! The reason is but too obvious; neither the Sovereign n~or the nobilitv would support it, when there was one. Mr. Arsold struggled to establish something approximating to the pure opera, but he was rained in the ...

THE PEOPLE'S CHARTER

... THE PEOPLE'S c 4ITER, B i A Patriot Lyuieby JOHN GOODWIN.BA~RMBt' Author of ' The Madhouse. A FPoem. : > Oh, ?? liatlas a'heart, althoiugh his'deeds wieze-lbinik as'aght, Would.notif'he were able, burst from 1d4kness.iirto light; And hail midnaight of Slavery, blest E'redom's dawning Star. The People's Charter soon to gain; Nurrmb! Hurril! Hurrahn! If in our Union strong, we be, .ssbillows. ...

FACTS, FANCIES, AND FICTIONS

... -9-- F A B L E S. THE LION AND THE FROG. (To the AnsiiCo)ssw Law Oratoe.) (FROM TIIE ORIGINAL GREEK OF A7SOI'.) A lion by the bunters sorely press'd, (The biting atrrow ravikliog ill l.is breast), Fled o'er the desert, when the fiery sun Had only half his lmlingi journey run, And safely reach'd (to him a blessed thing6) A chmup of palms, beside a rushy spring. There, as fie slak'd his thirst, ...

PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS

... plllBLiC AMUSBAIMNifTS. ' ll\(TYPE i or The Process of Making . Ioitr Electricit ,ElFibitadDailyataQuarterbe- .10t.L lOLYTECHNlC IsTiTUT 05N009 Regent 8treet. 1,}. t,;ton al follows :-Twelve, Electrical Experiments. r. A'jr licroscope - n7e, Plleltumtic Telegrapsh. Hall- I6 i y, . afie l tije lbill of Manufactures. Tywo, Cbemical or P L Cr QuatiertoThiesEleetrotille. Quartcr-pabt cA , ?? Qj ...

LITERATURE

... Tur, M5SSIAII: a Prem. By the Rev. Robert Mont- gimery, author of the Omniipresence of the Deity, &e. Glasgowv: J. Symington & Co. ?? forms the sixth anti concluding volime of the clegant uniform edition of the Reverend Gentle- man's worlks, now publishing in Glasgow. As the subject of the present poem is the most sublime and interesting to mankind the author could have se- lected, so lie has ...

VAU DE-VIRE

... VAU PE-VIRE. BlY OLIVEFR BASSEILIN. IcS'I' us drink as anily timnes As our naines liave letters in thlem; Sing we Islghter-moving rihymem; Say, Who shrill the first begin thorn? Pour the gollen eider high; LIst the ?? take From those drops of sunny (lye, Which now mirth ind wit awake. 0h I my name is all too short For that tide that swiftly passes Lot meo add, to spood our sport, Lotters many ...

PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS

... P'UBI/dC AAMUSAiUBVNTS. ELECTROTYPEl or The Process of Making ?? byvoltai, ?? ?? orbe Fure 'Three, at the POLYTECH NIC INSTITIITION, M9, Rcgelit-strOrt. -llourcotOfxhibitiosi ai follows 1-Twelvc, Electrical Experiameni'to tit-irwillrot Twelve, H icrescorr. One, t'aeoatlic Telegraph. Half- 01 llev. OPeiratives in the Hall of Manufoletures. TWo, Caerriical or I'iiilotiolilicuir Lescture. ?? to ...

Literary Notices

... - , - ?? -1 iLiterall) N-olicco, TItI l'SIS OFI 1.15. Secont Serics. Mixxr, Ion- don.-ibis ?? i the virlkqs *,1 Eli, by Mr. Charles Lxiilb, it, iir f crows-C no r bels andi co.- cltilles Ili, well-kuowvn evsays pilblilied under his tlame. \\ lhavee clilaraceristd tlis vriter is spex king oi tie fitsI number. In tire present nnimber theie arc a giood rrany essays which cotnain animaled dec-ripi ...

FASHION AND VARIETIES

... PASHION AND PAR)RrztgS The Queen visited the Princess Sophia at Kensingto0 Palace on Saturday afternoon. Her Majesty was attend by the Countess of Charlemont, Lady in Waiting and Col. Buckley, Equerry in Waiting. Viscount Melbourne had an audience of the Queen On Saturday. The Queen was to receive the address from the House of Commons on yesterday afternoon at two o'clock It is expected that ...