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Exeter Flying Post

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Exeter Flying Post

POETRY

... ?? ubittiolltt off &liootil tD t ?? Get stisdolt, antd with all thy getting, get tunderstanding.' Caste, sViilt3 the blossoms of thy years are brightest, Thout Youtlhful w andtorer il tho flowery inaze . CDUIO, white the rostless besot is bolulding lightest ; Alid Joy's lkine sunbeanms tremble in thy ways Comne, Iilue st cet though lts, like sulnlilaer butds unfolding, Walkeln riebb ...

POETRY

... [FOR VIt EXETEIL IFLYINiG-VIOST.i ?? ~ttc. Ytoux(; Love ventered onit, o0e ble'ri morn inl DeceUmber, A straige foolish tinIes, he twoli inl licad, 'oNW wihat wvas the retcion I don't well remember, ltit 'tons, withll soiched ilite6itio, 'twis said. 'The Sion o'er the (astern bills coldly was peopiiI6 'To Ijisoen stern tiataro fromn chilling repOSe, TIlo sweet Ioloers all were in etibryo ...

LITERARY NOTICES

... On the l'se and Abuse of t/he Flexible Tabe, and the thi Trrrcr.-BY Rtobert Iteind, Veterinary Surgeon, Crediton.-To pro Agricalttrists thi' little work suirst be of real rvline) foth its so clearlr e ltd to the purposo, poiltilg oait tihe tiost expudient ou uothbod, of ?? tirlne disoroders of cattle, that require almost for .imnediate relief. 'TIhe perrrids of this work trill miaire the ...

POETRY

... I Sonnet To the Young Lady, who Iamenftrd (hat 8he teas not morc BeautyW. . REPINE not Lady that thot art not rich Inbeauty'sgifts. Ob vishnotthatthychbeek Could vie in beauty with the blushing rose, Or that thy eyes like sibyl's fires could witch A giddy throng to worship at thy feet And thoughtless pledge thdir faithless, fragile vows. These charms though bright, are fading;-you possess A ...

POETRY

... By lie author of Regs1119, and iother Tragedies. MARCHi. Winter departs-is olie ?? swoor is o'er Shows a faint smile where all of late seem'd dead, So, the awakening Earth, berrumb'd no more, Her earliest growths in Nature's lap doth spread. Like pierups of verdant spears, above the roail Brlbs, pilnts. and sholots, in elfin beauty, rise In garden-ranges busy labourer s toil Tl'e day is fine ...

POETRY

... POE.TRY. O5r 511. JAblRS tiBAT. No rest for thv foot, oh, Dove, Thoit mva;est no further go, There's an rogry sky above, And a raging deep below; Though wildly toss the weary ark- Thottgh drear and dtill its chambers bh- Return, return, 'tis a sheltering bark, And a resting-place for thee! 'Twas vain to send thee forth, To tire thy downy wing: From the drowned attd sunken earth, Wbat tidings ...

POETRY

... E OETRYo I ?? [tORa TIHE EXETEL vLYI5N0.POST.J fall Uioing 5i0on. A GEItSIaN UNIKINO SONO, susig bv the celebrated Vocalist 1Ft3N11Y PIIILIPS, at his Musical Entortainmesot, in the Greenwich Lecture Hall, uggested tho scritilig of the OlloWisig SONG:- IN Wintor we must kiss, doar;- And swould you, why, be told We thoe ?? love ?-for this dear- 'Tis then o. very cold Anld love, bolioeo me, dear, ...

POETRY

... I Stv Vlasater>l. A So1o rOB MAY MoRNiNfo. PART VI. The dead months bad, many a day, sweet, Been tinting a wreath for you, Ere pallid snows died away, sweet, Or sklio were warm and blue; Spring blossoms and buds you, rightly, May guess the circlet form, And never, I vow, more brightly, The rainbow crowned the storm. No flower my flower can name, sweet, No bud my bud can name, But there is the ...

POETRY

... asr. Olina af tMad5l. (FRSOM TIIRATIIUDNEUM.C T¶iRaowv by all toy !-A sudden peal or drend ThIroUgh Earope's firmament il ?? rolls. A Throne hallt fallen ;-a Hing no more confroufa A people h virwth the stream tbat in its bed Swellod force and higt, by lieart-hllp rountalain rfed, Mllth burst its baik . Inodignant VegrdaDcn tls The kboll of Craft -0a Hlistorys crowded scrolls Strsigo ?? arnO ...

LITERARY NOTICES

... Fraser's Magazine, 2Ve. 126, fir J Ole.-4-Jmes Fraser, 21o, itigot Street, Lndonloii.-O1l every eooOllunt, WIvi should 0Ilr*ll1Ol0i t1iib o or Otmetellolt, Ilt th0 isto o1o ill which it so t-oligly irStllIllO t ooo own toolinigs 001 Ioutiliellts, ?? 0141 ?? thlolk 1) Ollollsll bo illsolltible to fihlt. ev00 woro thero ywll\itO t'biore i8 ?? t iolll it poelis of Charlos Loch Eothitko, 1sq, ...

POETRY

... POETRY [FOR TOHE EXUTHt PLYINGPOST-t ?? oil tbriT fA 13f'rt-D t bc @lvillv of O Mav f~ri. Vhe~ocou ri~tannia ! lot~tho l'mac reli, From lndus, to ta m Irigld Polo- O'er all the leIa, whieh even Violencsway, Lot gladness beam, on this ousplaleus da. Whilst Albion's eons, sod lovely deaghtom reise, The song of gcttihedoe,.mn Hycn, of praise, For England's Qoeeic and Ecjglacsd'aiiu Dst Hoir- To ...

EXETER LITERARY SOCIETY

... E On Friday, the 20th April, at the Athenaeum, Mrs. C. L. Balfour delivered her first lecture on the Moral and Intellectual Influence of Woman on Soeiety f. The attendance was very numerous; W. Hichens, Esq., in.. the chair. The lecturer.treated her subject in a popular and interesting nianner. 'She speaks remarkably well, and fully proved herself deserving of the metropolitan and provincial ...