Selected Poetry

... ?btllcEtO C HARITY. BY OaoTtte, J. LEE STTEVrZs* Where pleasurei beam, where joys abound, Where happy hparts alone are fouand, Where even love m 1y deign to be, Tbere still is room for Charity l The brightest eyes may brighter smile- The warmest heart. may warmaer glow- That fromt enjoynelnt, turn a hile, To dry the tears of wrant and woe ! And where unhappy discord re: -ns Where passion ...

LITERARY NOTICES

... Sa MASTER HuMPHrEv'e CLOcK. London: Ohapman and Hall; w Livel p, ol.W. Webb.--NVe have received Part 15 of tho Clock, in cm which Boz enters upon historical matter of great Importance di and ?? George Gordon and the No-Poperyrots arisa- Cf ing out of his Lordship's fanaticism and the machinations of the w Protestant AesociatlO of that day. Our modern Protestant As-P seolations seem to be ...

Poetry

... Ia a r t q) - POETRY.-By T. R. J. POLSON. Es titwrraO within thy silent home, Thy slumber who shall treak? What eurthly voice can reach thy ear, Or thy repose awake p Not many days since thou wert clad,. Io Youth and Beauty's prime; How trarisient was thy stay on earth * Ho' very short thy time! Thy father, sorrowing at thy grave, Bedews it with his tears- -He sighs and weeps but there no ...

POETRY

... TLhe l'olloo'ing beaotifoI linies ate token fvo ot Northern Cootempe- rare;. Th~ey strongl~y retoijoi us of time potiros aid puorify of WVords- weor' it. The author, it Is said. resides troor Fort Augusolis. LINES WRITTEN DECEMBERti~ 3iST, 1510. oih yes !It is a melancholy time To tlrinhing arlnds-tho' thoussrrdo rnay be found so thooghtiess, as to wev. ?? tile past, Roses to deck the ...

ADELPHI THEATRE

... ADLLPIII THEATRE. The 1ong-proomid ?? Of 4 Rohepieroe, or The log oer ror. Twas produced x On Tueqday evening, and in a style of sple uling ausy- h ting vre ev cr sw bbrought out on the stage. The piece must ie seen to be jsee apreciastly npprei or fi ?? c e a sund d all other app urtenalc es. it us a perlpct studly, evicsing n liberal denirnl of c of pene oil the part of thle inganagement, ...

THEATRICAL EXAMINER

... I Taglioni has re-appeared at her Majesty's Theatre, to give what help she can to the fag-end of a season of uniform ill luck and many disap- pointments. She is more thin, and more faiscinat- ing, than ever. Mademoiselle Rachel is lingering on through her five nights more; another night more being added, though the specification was quite unnecessary, for the benefit of M. Laporte. We had ...

Foreign Varieties

... Satin Yarirties. The Commerce, under date Vienna, 28th nilt., announces the failure of the banking-houlse of Steine and Co., one of the most considerable in that city. His Excellency Lord Granville continues to improve in health, at Villa La Jonchere; but, under the present aspect of affairs, the noble earl does not contemplate returning to the hotel of the embassy. Col. Howard Vyse, author of ...

Packet of Fashionable Life

... it joada 11 of Jffc. ? W-11 - - Earl itzrailliain, the l-Ion. George andi the Ladics Wentwortlh Fitzwilliam, havec left towni for Wontwortl. The Earl of Tyrconnel has returned to Cowes from a short cruise on the French coast. Earl de Grey, (President of the institute of British Architects,) Lord Wrottesley, (President of the Astrono- mical Society,) Lord Mlollnctafe, (the Earl of Carnarvon,) ...

LITERATURE

... L12'ERArUAR. t reared ?? THE CITIZEN. C Each successive number of this talented and national ti periodical contains many articles on which we would wil. ti lingly dwell at some length, but the bustle and pressure of a' election time oblige us to bestow only a very brief space A upon our remarks on the present one. The first paper in the number for July bears the expressive, we would say the ...

Poetry

... lp.sm-1). THE GOOD OLD CAUSE, AN ELECTION BALLAD. Hurrab, hurrah, for the good old cause I 'Tis a stirring sound to hear; For it tells of the rights and franchises Which our fathesibought so dear: It brings us back to the ancient times, When, like valiant men, they stood, To sprinkle our Infant libbrties With the baptism of blood; WhIlst mailed baron and mitred priest Came riding o'er the lea, ...

THE STAGE

... ITER MAJESTY'S THEATRE. Mademoiselle Taglioni took her benefit at this theatre on Thursday, the 15th inst. The enter- tainments commenced with Bellini's opera, called 'I Puritani ?? the principal characters in which were sustained by Lablache, Rubini, Tamburini, and Grisi. They acquitted themselves in their usual talented manner. A new, ballet, called 'Matilde; or, La Magic Amoureuse' followed ...

Our Scrap Book

... - our trap Mool. OR EXTRACTS FROM RECENTLY PUBLISIIED WORKS, AND PUBLIC JOURNALS. STEAM NAVIGATION TO INDi.O-Thie Oriental Steam Navigation Company is carrying into effect some improve- ments in the communication with the Levant, Egypt, and India, which are the result of a mission to the East of one of the directors, for the purpose of obtaining information. By the improved arrangements, it ...