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Poetry

... ?. fjvhv-?? ? A WINTER CHANT. By TOR rITLWAST MAN.10 sorrow o for Sprlag, lo it llI no, no, Ihroogb the sun of her love there are sbadiws of mnow, AO more holy to.rno we thel flts of thei asp,. alb heart ?? Ite Sd a band for m; olnp. jpyou'vs hate let ltrtigs, jti ?? itoe let it burn, I'e3~rhewthbre adeftmsaduismia beaeon ieruldtkrm, av awat :with. j;. .aiiotr.tongtisd silmpering % 5o tbet ...

Poetry

... spoctra. THE 13AIRNS O' THE MILL. Air-Cahn Dewy Mornin'. Have you heard on a cauld wintry mornin', When snaw mantled muirland and hill, Tbi horn or the bell loudly warnin' The barefooted bairns to the mill? Sae di.some it rings through ilk dwellin' That sleep flees the puir bairnies' c'en While, waefu', the mother is callin' To rise, her wee Johnio and Jean. Wi' puir tremblin' forms and wan ...

LET US ORGANIZE!

... LET US ORGANiZE! WAY TO DO SO EFFECTUALLY. The general cry for ae a effjicient Plan of Or gsaizition is one of the must hopeful signs of the tnos. ' It bespeaks a general desire on the part of the working classes so to apply the power that UaNION can give, that it may eventuate in eat good to the oppressed mtaly. They are unwilling that their exertions sihould be longor frittered away on ...

Literature

... Uittrature. A CHRISTMAS GARLAND. Fin the stirrup cup with glee; Sing a merry roundelay; Christmas brings its revelry: Dance, and sing, and let's be gay. Hey for mirth and jollity; rush about the ruby wine; Merry lot the neinstrel play, Care and mirth can ne'er combine. A Welcome, good reader, and good caseer to thee for again approaches the head and chief of Merry England's happy holidays ...

Poetry

... poetrs. BEAUTIES OF BYRON. NO. xvirI. CHILDS HAROLD. We c ontinua o lt extracts from the fourth Canto i scr;itivC of lRome: here is a picture ot de5cri~t'v of TIIE PANTHEON. m de, orect, severe, austere, sublime- 9'1*l1l siis ud temple of al I gods, ?? Jove to Jeus~-sparvd ?? blest by time t eoh r tliquility, while ?? or nods Xr di elpireg eachll thing round thee, ani man plodls sr mitiough ...

Poetry

... joefitv 1. CAP FIT-CAP WEAR. Out on thy canting loyalty ; I 'Tis but the coward's boast; Tbe heart most true to monarchy Must love the people most. Tue key-stone of the social plan Mlay be the regal throne; The people still support the span, Its firm foundation stone. The rights that wreath the diadem Spring only front their nod ; But their sxternal sights. to them, Were guaranteed by God. And ...

Reviews

... Urbith3o. - ?? THE YOUNG MAN'S CATECHISM. We have had by us for some time a pamphlet, entitled The First Step in the Ladder to Political Knowledge, or, THE YOUNG MAN'S CiTECsESM , by Robert Burrell, of Greenook, to which we should have directed earlier attention, had it not been for the Conference claim upon our columns. However, it is a work written in so simple and convincing a style, ...

Reviews

... : i= = Metingb LAYS OF THE LOOM. A SELscTIoX OF POETICAL PscaCS av JkYES Gow. Dundee: G. and J. Taylor. This unpretending collection of poetical pieces is another evidence of the mind and ability existing in the ranks of the working-class. To one of the most unfortunate sections of that class JAmrs Gow *balongs,-he is a handloom weaver. In his short and simple preface the author remarks, ...

Reviews

... --Retbfe o -. W- Revolutions and eounter-revolutions, Repub- licas revolts and royal flights, insurrections and prescriptions, emeuies, demonubrations and' trin umapbs of publio order ?? have of late so occupied our attention, and so much monopolised our columns, that wi.e have allowed this department of the STAa to fall into neglect. In the clearing off arrears of publications received for ...

Poetry

... #,etotr. THE DIITONER960I) OF NATIONS. AY Alts1lPATION. (Sgggegted by Dertaner b s ' S.afe aflignm t#i# pes p&e' The War5 had ceased : the weary untloas furled Their tattered and sheathed thati b ?? t ,words; stnleft o di , e ddcim ted t told v WIunt e is ?? and fts sorrow*drewardts. T it o shung pt i , orrais di gdoinb ond te fea r, Brsae an* appeal to Oh. ee suffedsnleland_ Form an alianine ...

Reviews

... Bmeviews. HISTORICAL VIEW OF THE FRENCH REVOLUTION. By J. MICHELET.- Translated by C. Cocxs, B.L. London: HI. G. Boln, York-street, Covent-garden. THE title of this work is well-chosen. His- torical View is more fitting than History -would have been. MICHELET is not the man to write the History of his nations internal and external struggles. He is too discursive, too obscure, too full of ...

Reviews

... 3Atbife)-+ I e- - ?? ?? THE PURGATORY OF SUICIDES. A PRISON RHYmE IX TEN Boo-s. By Tuaw0XX COOPER, the Chartist. London: J. How, 132, Fleet-street. (Continued from the Star of Nov. Ist.) The Ninth Book is brief, consisting of but some fifty stanzas. The characters who figure therein aie exclusively female,-PORCIA, ARRIA, the wife of ASDRVBAL, the Carthaginian, SorHnoNiA, and BARux.t, the ...