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Bristol, Bristol, England

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Poetry

... THE FUNERAL OF THOMAS CAMPBELL. He departed in the fulness of his years, and his fame shed a halo round the pillow on which he breathed his last sigh! And it is done! the organ peal hath wafted to the sky That now, beneath that gorgeous pile, a poet's relics lie; Beneath that glorious roof where kings repose in awful-state— And England's great and England's brave the Final Word await. No ...

Literature

... IL it ra tUt. The Works of G. R. P. James, Esq.; Voi. 1.- The Gipsy. Smith and Co., London. As a novelist Mr. 3atues has taken his place in the first rank of the writersof tie day and hasattaineda degreeof popularity which sufficiently accounts for and justifies the present publica, lion, the object of which is to give to tile public a complete and uniform editiou of his works, revised and ...

LITERARY VARIETIES

... .. ITERART vz aXs. POPULAR EDUCATION.-Some-tilie Since 'it Was stated that a cburchrana, resident at AManrchester, had, through the Rev. Dr. Vaughan, principal of Lanoashire Independent College, offered the munificent snot of 1051. for tha beat eassay on thle aab- ject af popular education, Seres'pI -r Ier set in, and the adjudicators have at length awarded the prize to the Rev. R. W. ...

LITERARY VARIETIES

... LZTEIARY VARIMTZES. I feel persuaded that an entire change of opinion and feel- ing towards the classes beneath us, that a total change of cou. duct must be wrought, before we can lay any just claims to the character of a really Christian people-Christians, not in name and doctrine only, but in feeling and ?? l Righes of the Poor. THE CITY OF X(Exico.-The plan of the city of Mexico is ...

LITERARY VARIETIES

... LIzTE1AEY VARIETIES. THE SANGUINE AND TaE OvEt-CAu~tOUS -There are many men, especially at the outset of life, wvho, in their too eager desire for the end, overlook the difficulties in the way; there is another class, who see itothing else. The first class ?/iay sometimes fail; the latter rarely succeed.-S. ?? Coleridge. TlHE Fox FAMILY.-Napoleon remarked that all the family of the great Fox ...

Poetry

... ? vottr-P. LONDON CHURCHES-Y BR. M-. XIILNEs, Esq. MP. [rosRon HOOD'8 MAGOAZINE FOR JULY.] I ?? ?? Heathnendom's vast temples Befor a tr ehrhdor, Held men of every fate; The congrention6alhor The steps of far Benares And gr, a.gessorod Commingle small and groat; From one ootatopp'd a lady The dome of St. Sophia I oft bad seen before. Clonfounds all human state; Her band was5 or a prayer ook, ...

Poetry

... Ontrp. A BIT O' SLY cOORTEN.-JOHN AND FANNY.; ?? ,, Poems Of sual Life, ill the DorsetDiakect. By W. Barnes.) JOHN. Now h~ate y~a bie ta co~e. Wh~er have ye stay'd 7 How loug ye have a miade me wait abouet l I th~ought ye werdeni ?? to come agen, I had a mind to geo baok bnloone agen. This idden when ya procnie'd to come out. FANNY. Now 'tidden any use to miake a row, Yar 'pou my word I ...

Poetry

... aoetj. , _ THE PILGRIM. ! there are plmil the ,vld that mingle with the soul, Joys that throgh (very swelling vein. in tides of rupture roll; And there are reals of fantied hlisstiut fadeless seem& free, But what are all thosefleetinig joys and all theircharmato me? With girded loinS and sandald feet, my eteff within my hand, I am at best a pilgrim here, and ueek a hetter land. ol there are ...

LITERARY VARIETIES

... lITERAXY VARXETIES. Walter Scott said seriously in his autobiography, through every part if my literary career, I have felt pinched and ham- pored at my own ignorance. NEWSPAPER.-The newspaper is the chronicle of civilisa- tion, tbe common reservoir into which every atreaui pours, its living naters, at which every man may come and drink; it is the newspaper which gives to liberty a ...