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Yorkshire and the Humber, England

Place

Leeds, Yorkshire, England

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2,835
154

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2,989

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LEEDS PUBLIC EXHIBITION

... ?? our former publications wve have given a gene- eon ral, though but very brief, outline of this most extensive one and rare collection of the Works of nature and of art, and ksac- the productions of science. We shall now endeavour to aif fulfil our promise of Pointing out to the attention of our five readers some few of' those objects which strike us as the 3of most worthy the visiter's ...

SONNET ON THE PROJECTED KENDAL AND WINDERMERE RAILWAY

... S9ONNET ON THE PROJECTED KENDAL AND ?? ' WINDERMERE RAILWAY. Is there no nook of English ground secure From rash assault ? Schiemes of retirement sown In youth, and mid the busy world kept pure As when their earliest flowers of hope were blown, Must perish: how caln they this blight endure? And Mu-st lie teo Itis old delights disown WILo scorns a false utilitarian lure Mid his paternal fields ...

COME AWAY!

... COME AWAY !: Come, come with me to the greenwood tree ! Merry and blythe shall our revels be; Wve'll leave the dull town and its cares behind, And be happy and free as the wanton windv!: I We'll chase the young snuirrels from bough to bongl', Or we'll pluck the wild flowers in the shades tlhatgrow; And I'll weave a wreath of the flowerets fair, To twine in thy tresses of rich brown hair. And ...

Poetry

... ?? - ?? I-.w . - -. - - - ?? - ~- - - - - - - - - - v- - BIRDS. Ansutr to Eliza Cook'spoem on Bids, Published in the Northen Slar of Nov. 11the, 1843. Birds ! birds! ye are troublesome things With your keen prying eyes and your swiftilying Wings Where shall we wander or where shall we dwell, Troublesome things I that ye come not as well ? Ye build in our chimniesa-the funnels ye choke, Till ...

Poetry

... j9orlri-?. -, ?? ?? ?? ?? ~ERI IN. TO ITS OWN TVINE. sben Erifl first rose from the dark swelling flood, God blesad the green sland and Saw It weas good; Th~e ena'rale of Eurrope, it sparkled and shone la the ring of the vorld the moat precious stone. In her Hans in her soil, in her station thrice blest, With her back towards Britain, her face to the West, 3ric Stands proudly insular on her ...

Poetry

... jortfp. HARROW REMINISCENCES-PEEL AND BYRON. Peel and I were at Harrow together. Peel is a know- ing fellow, and will get on in the world. He beat me at classics, but in declamation I was at least his equal.- Moore's Lifeof Byroi. Robert has doubled his fortune, and ruined his coun- ?? BRoert PeeV's father. !AU our happiness consists in being well deceived - English PObliW. BYRON. ...

Literary Extracts

... j~iterarp Oxtracto. HINTS TO WIvEs.-Make yourself so agreeable to your husband, that he will see there is no true hap- piness absent from hishome. Be alwaysbecomingly dressed, and have your household and yourself per- fectly clean and comfortable-looking. But beware how you show too earnest a desire to keep him at home, as mcn are selfish creatures, and seldom feel much beyond what relates to ...

Literary Extracts

... Ilf~erariD xfractS. TOTE SCHOOLIMASTER'S EXPEDIENT.-The able re- view of HaHfura's Lire'ciaf 'sho's3pBurgess, in the Eclectic of tidis month, 'relates the followini' tt'*y df Dr. Juseph ,Wavton, when master of Winchest6r .school :- Wartin was a main of tast, ral''d bad ihb measotastent for poetry ; but, like uost men' of the same celas 'he disliked philology, -and that dislike entailed ...

Poetry

... :eozvlr,+ S(IRAPS FOR BRADICALS. No0. xY!T. D1'y iL T. CLANC1. Thle Soldier's Bride, or La Heroine de Franoals. ?? ! to the bride with n free-horn iolOU Md mtnd djisitiniag baso conltroul; X ~ffer the meced *f our juot ayplause ie the Heroine *if the holy canoe °thelte 3sweet Mlarseilles hymln was sung, Aol1 ti36 eaaile sperl' anld the Tocsin rung, Sj p' uod otrsel by tbo oannon's side, yjr ...

Poetry

... jpottrv. 'UNIVERSAL LIBERTY-THE CHARTIST )tE&CTION. See the wiher of freedom, now proudly unfurleld- Hear ?? glad voice of liberty sound through the world; Ast1 it calls on tho 0ons of oppression to rice; Hark! it rings through the earth, and it enters the skies; And it bears on its migbty breath on high The resolve of a people to conquer or die! Then up! for behold, on the wings of the blnt, ...

Reviews

... utbighw. PEACE PERMANENT AND UNIVERSAL :, its Practicability, Value, ard Cox sistency with Divine Revelation; a Prize Essay, by H. T. J. MACNAMARA. London: Saunders and Otley, Condait-street, 1841. This is one of the most eloquent and powerful essays upon the subject on which it professes to I treat which has ever issued from the British press. J It was composed in consequence of a circular ...

Reviews

... ?Btbido. SCENES OF JOY AND WOE. Br EVEN Ryrsia. Scene First. The Blessed Apparition. London: Simpkin and Marshall. Edinburgh: Mae- laohlan and Stewart. Glasgow: David Ro- bertson. 1842. This is the first of a series of tales illustrative of the joys and woes which chequer this changing state of existence, and produce the vivid lights and deep shadows of human life. It will, as we learn from ...