Poetry

... I 1poetrtv. THE OTHER DAY. Upon the meadows spread below, Full softly fall the flakes of Enow, Yet choke they up the way That lately wound along the scene, 'Mid fields of gold and swards of green, Ay, but the other day. The sun bath shrunk into the soutb, And every bird hath shut its mouth, And broken off its lay; And yet with sultry beams the air, And yet with songs the woodlands fair, Were ...

TRAGIC LYRICS

... The great master of fun and metaphysics, Puneh, who can of a verity read sermons in stones, and extract a smile from the flegellations of his scnurg, recently tried his hand at the following adaptations ol ' Old Saws to Modern anstances. What. though the American Talms, the Forrester, not of Bow-street, but of Broad-srreet, be occupied with his new readings of Shakspere, why should the ...

Published: Sunday 23 February 1845
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 402 | Page: Page 7 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

SPORTING LITERATURE

... . - I7 'FEE SPrT.NrOx N AGAZGNE. ?? A. Pittman, Warwick. 1:are.)-'1e tluciber For the present month has a remarkably p relyv engraving of 1 ly Pack`, depicting the young heir apparent, in the plenitude of his glory, astride his favorite pony, with as miscellaneous an assemblage of canines as could be collected frlon the Newfoundland to the Blenheims-from the terrier to the lap-dog. There is ...

Published: Sunday 09 February 1845
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 816 | Page: Page 11 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

[ill] AND LEGENDARY ART

... I hED ANiY LE(E NDAiRl AT. 'J.ie Our 7i'ianiqelibs/', eonjO d .t' fIF tlie read tliit0ry iior St. Luke wve know Very 1Jl I olts not[1 Rlipos tIC', andc, likeL St. Mark, i~'~il.1t Ii Obeen ?? Vel'ted after the aS - ?? of ur le,01 Ilie its belove-d disciple . lookei ac~n~ilit ?? and Bemanti re11in amd Wiltht his master an~d e'.ic Cci to die last. A ftel' the nalrtyrdonsl or St. md S. Va1 ...

BRIEF CHRONICLER OF THE TIMES

... I BRIEF CHRONICLER OF THE TMES.. 'The Banik of England is lending money at 2J per cent- , interest. r It is stated that a French Operatic Company, now per- 1, forming on the continent, will shortly visit Liverpool. e Henr' Johnstone, the once celebrated Irish actor, died ynlast week, in London. The elevation of Lord Howard, now Earl of Effingham, to the peerage, by the death of his father, ...

Varieties

... I - 'F Good manners are the blossoms of good k sense, and, it may be added, of good feeling; for if the b law of kindness be written in the heart, it will lead to . that disinterestedness in little as well as in great things r- -that desire to oblige, and attention to the gratifica. tion of others, which are the foundation of good ' manners.-Locke. What sculpture is to a block of marble, l ...

THE THEATRICAL EXAMINER

... THE THEATRICAL EXAMINER HER MAJESTY S THEATRE. The announcement of the forthcoming Opera season looks exceedingly well: decidedly better than last year. Grisi, Mario, Lablache, Fornasari and Mariani are retained, and though we cannot but regret the absence of Persiani, the engagement of Madame Rossi Caccia of Lisbon, and Madame Rita di Borio of Madrid, both soprani, shows the disposi- tion to ...

Selected Poetry

... q?rivvm Lump. I'LL SPEAK OF THIIEE, I'LL LOVE THEE TOO. I'LL. ?? of tl(e, I'll love tllee too, loudly, nnd vitlt aectiou true; I'are as you shy's celestial blue My lows diall be, my love sbtll bo. In setislitie aud illu' *louds sshall low'r, III ut1irthi tad sorrol's seadld'llig Ihur ; Wt]ile( e maroy lives, tind life Ites power, I'll s IC of tlIei, II 'q s:etk oi' t iI e. TIlro' youth's gy ...

Poerty

... h- oe rs' TIlE CIIARTER, AND NO SURRENDER ! The lords of tire soil claim the poor man's toil His labonur to them is given For a crust of bread and a str'atv-roofed shed, Though bleak as the winds of heaven. To sow and till, so that valley and hill May yield up their fertile store, Must the toiler slave, and at last receive The bust's, when his labour's o'er'. 11t the gloomy Mille, wvhlere no ...

POETRY

... POETRlY. SONG.-11Y MOUN'1AIN ?? tl. ?? pert ! vvs partr! there falls a tear I leavc th'cspot I love so vell; Villt nauoghtt mvy weary steps to cleer Save hope, wehicih doth my bosoim sverl':- }3ut still however far I roait, id y heart is in niy mnountaill holne. Thc stin sinkls o'cr yon distant hill, 'That slitI er5 f'routi tlie stolain mtoy cot:; Anil where tin IJ ? A wanidercr still, Uniknow ...

POERTY

... A .4L§4 - n S EL ECTED. 1l ORIGINAL AND SELECTED, TO THE SNOWDROP. (Original.) I bend o'er thoe, pale drooping flower, And in uwy heart revives an hour, When yet a child, I watched my father-now no more- As from the woods, well pleased, he bore Thy flowrets wild. The gems, within a chrys.al vase Of water pure, I saw him place, With gentle care; The sight my bosom thrilled with joy, And never, ...

FASHIONS FOR FEBRUARY

... (rom ethe London and Paris Ladies' .llragazie of Fashion.) Whilst pompadour teetfout, pehin satins, and all rich materials in beautiful and lively colours are among the splendid novelties of the season, all lighter materials are preferred for ball dresses; crapes, ombrirs and em- broidered, and other silk materials, as well as oryanedy are worn. Yellow is a very fashionable colour for crapes ...