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Bristol, England

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Bristol, Bristol, England

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1,406

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1,406

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Poetry

... poetry0i SONNET. now rosy fair my Ilody was to see C1,11of by my uancourtly wvorsd, ho told; Bather a 1hoping borrower let ia be-.- A debtor to the lloaster minds of old. Of golden wires, or capture I susbeams made, Hler lovely locks fell o'er her neck of snow; Her arched hro'vs Inelosed, in fringed shade, Two nurplo violots thlt slept el own .f rcddet cornl were her houeyed lips (anrdig the ...

Poetry

... jpottrp. THE VISRI AND THE PO WFBR. ONwARD-onward still aspiring, Through the ideal realms untiring, Wings the Wish its bouneless way Nothing of life's perils countinu But still higher-higher mounting, Panting for a further sway. Far-far behiad the Poweer moves slow along, Chain'd to the earth by heavy bonds of clay, Repulsed by myriad toils that round it throngs And bar its progress to ...

Literature

... L it t atu r t. The Westminster Realewfor Jurae.-Clarke, London. The improvement iii the writing of the Wfestminioster Review appears to be acknowledged on all hands. The present number commences with a slashing attack onl Sir James Graham, in which the cbnges aand shiftings of the bon. baronet, as exhibited in )is acts and speeches, ore laid bare. The handlin6is severe, but can scarcely be ...

Poetry

... ?)otI13J. T~l-E PATRIOTS' HYLDI 1?. iLORD! I vhilo for all mankind we pray, 0f every clime and coast, 0, hoor us for our native land- The land wve love the moat I Our fathors' sepolebres are here, And here our kindred dwell; Our children, too; how should we love Another land so well I 0, guard our shores from every foe, With peace our borders bless; W;ith prosperous time, our cities crown, Oar ...

LITERARY VARIETIES

... SrANIS11 TIAGiSTnIAtTEs,-A rich miller in the country wvas| flxcd upon by tlree persons, as a lt object to bc plicked. It so ohan0ed that shlortly beforc the time appoilited.for the attack of his house a party of travelling soldiers had requested lodging aof' him for the ligist, whiii ?? hc hd granted ; hid thisc soldiers were ?? above, wilen the robbers arrived aind donianded c his molicy. ...

Poetry

... poetrY., I THE BEGINNING OF THE SECOND BOOK OF LTUCBETItUS, Suave maril magnoe turiantitus aquora entis. SWEET on tbe shore, from care and danger free, To wateh the raning of the angry sea; Soe tbe worn ship upon the billows tost- Now high upborne, now in the surges lost. Not that ive any joy or pleasure knowv From witnessing another's grief und wo; But, being ourselves beyond the tempest's ...

LITERARY VARIETIES

... if At the end of flume's History of Elizabetli, Sir John Malcolm ie wrote as follows:- The head cannot join the heart respecting n Mary; nor can the heart follow the head about Elizabeth. C ?? in any part of outr carriage, is d lighting up a candle to oar delbet, and never Etils to make us be . talken notice of, either as wanting sense or as wanting sincerity. ?? Ef BmIEF CANNOT BE FoReco. ...

LADIES' FASHIONS FOR JUNE

... .- a- - --.t -1 - a -- -. - ?? . ?? .. Taffetas, plain and glacds, are used for dresses, with pardeasus. to match; the colours most in demand are pale green glaue with black or white, sky blue glacd with orange, pearl gray glare, withcerise, apricot, paille, and particularly lilac these robes are with triple plain skirts for petites soiredes, or with flounces Or the promenade; then we have ...

LITERARY VARIETIES

... INTERESmNG DiscOviaty.-M. Paul Gervais has just disco- vered in the upper tertiry. stratum of Montpellier a species of fossil ape, probably belonging to the Macaque genus. On com- paring this discovery with that of 3. Lartet, in the Gers, and those made in the environs of London, it appears that fossil apes have been discovered in the three principal tertiary strata of Western Europe, that is ...

Literature

... ltterature. The C1rAstian Life, a Manual of Sacred Verse. BRy Robert Jolntw gcsmery, M.A. Arthur Hall and Co., 25, Paternoster-row, London. This handsome volume, its author tells us, Is mainly pub. lished on behalf of the noble institution for the cure of con- sumption, founded at Brompton, which, it will be remembered, the genius of the Lind has lately so munificently befriended. ...

Poetry

... Voctrv. T S OE OFN H T.-B Ti t P RA ya. C. HUL.L. v thie country Cities have thplreb Asrs And thair atvantages I miss the r not; BIt bless HIS goodnass who bath cpltumh lot Among these hlls, e and tre , a t farms, rutegre eert-ss and pleas where. fenced from a vdinorders nw' rlarms. I may have ampler sface for quiet thougIst, And forevolsg teasweet acss tai ut ?? ' is moody reigaoro tame' ...

CORRESPONDENCE BETWEEN LORD BROUGHAM AND MR. BRIGHT, THE QUAKER

... LETTRa L Dear Mister Bright-I'm grieved to see The League has been abusing me. The League is wrong, and I am right; Echo me, do I dear Mister Bright. It was the Chrosncze that said it; Bist there, of coulse, I never read it: 'Twas in the Quarterly Beiews, Which, as a Liberal good and true, I of the Clironicle take in lUen. Write by return, and say there is no room, Dear Mr. Bright, for ...