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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

... 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 ...

Literature

... ?t'ra, UTI.C,-, 0? ?? The first paper consite of soms SPIrite extrelo. from 6ther correspondence of teeebte nd m tis adHster stanllope--ti, lady, ho0maiecofcnvftflltOdoy It her from English Polsed e ey r E~ 'It asen Queen Amongst the.'Arb ftl eet isted siOIa sa f colliection, of stornes an ncdts 'oiteetcd r wtthth l~er'a of that amusing PerO~e~ -lbt ~'~s. Som ofb the f sketches are Well ...

Poetry

... Voctrp. 3M9DI''ATIONS ON THE P'OOR LAY.. B3Y A CONSERVATIVE P':Et. WIJY should I support mny neighbour On my goods-agailnst ioy will ? Can 'It he live by honest labour1- Call 't he beg,-or can 't he steal? Poor-rates make such sad confusion I- I, for osy part--cannot see Dow Join Thomsofn's destitution Gives him any claim on mne! Soith may n't own a somgle penny,- Alust I then mny pound ...

Literature

... - i~t rat u re. c/hia, I11etratoed: Parts 1. lo 11:-Fisher and Sot, LoItdo1. 'Ihis is aimost attractiveiwork. Ittocoalpies entiroly nowground, andl thc execution is svsrthy oft tho boldnless of ithe desig ai nd ofthte importance of tho sabjeot. 'I'be euriosity w'liot lhas so long lain dortetantt in reopect to the hitherto telrinutical ly-sealeod empire of China is fairly awaklaetd, and is ...

Poetry

... foctrtv. ON READING SOME LINES IN THE LIFE OF LORD BYRON.) BAsD, in thy rich and cinseoi rhyme The groas of Poesy are shrined: They shall be valued long as time One lover of the muse shall find. But to this simple page belong The records of anection past; Not the vain breath of Fiction's song, But words on Reason's basis cast. A soul like thine, 't were woman's joy, And woman's triumph, to ...

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 ...

Poetry

... patt.rp. - SO N NE T. CLOSE, close the book-the book of the old year I Enough I 've read- -enough recorded there i Sorrow, and death, and sin, on many a page (In dismal characters) mine eye engage. Bright names now carved on monumental stone- Names of the wise, the kind, the good, the gay,- Who were my joy on the year's primal day, Here, as my loved associates are shown. And thou, old year, ...

Literature

... Ei terat ure. New Holland. By T. Bartlett, Assistant-Surgeon, olst Light Infantry.-Longman and Co., London'. There have been few more productive sources of misery titan emigration, wvithfIt a proyer previous inquiry and a judicious apportionment of me .ns to ends. Tbe present volume is intended to co.omunicate information respecting the colonization, pro- ductions, and resources of New Holland ...

THORNBURY DAHLIA SHOW

... I'-ORsNBURY D)AH-.LIA SHOW. The last floricultural eslilbitiun for the present seaeon, of 'til the Thorenbury Society, tool; place on W~ednlesday last, in the ruine of the ancient castle, inl that towvn. The day woea one in of the finest that the seasou has aff'orded, and the attendance . was, by far, more numer ous tnan on any previous o casonth and included nil the rank, fashion, and beauty ...