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England

Place

Bristol, Bristol, England

Access Type

8

Type

8

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LITERARY VARIETIES

... LITE'ORARY VARIETIES. THE BLUSHI OF MODESTY is nature'd alarm at the approach a of sin, and her testimony to the dignity of virtue. DR. ADAM CLAIucE's ADVICE TO ISI1 AmErICAN BRETHREN. -As a church, abide in the apostles' doctrine and fellowship. i As a nation, be firmly united; entertain no petty differences; totally abolish the slave-trade; abhor all offensive ware; never provoke even the ...

Poetry

... Vppourpo ?? A P R I L.-Br JoHtN 'CRITCHLEY PRINCE. SIGIHING, storming, Singing, smniling, With ber ninn11Y oloods9 heg9liag Aprii walllks tile ?? earth: Wheresoc'er she looks and lingers- Wheresoc'5r she lays hier finfera, Sor los ebharm starts ito birth! Fitful clo0ds about liar sweoping, Cooling, gohig, frowIlilIg, Weep ig, IlIt In fertile blcssilgs round; Freluellit rainbows ?? embhrae ...

Poetry

... poetry$ THE MOTHEW4 FAITH. Mo lf TIE ENGLXSlVWO1MAN'S IAGAZINE.] IIARn how tlh whid i1 Whistling, mother, List to the driving rain;, Aias I to think tiat m1y gentle brother Is ?? oin the stormy maln. The mother raised her nimok blno eye, From the holy book to the stornmy sky, And a nionilt's tfush went o'er ner brow As she thoeligt of tho hoiling flood below inut shl cheek'd hter buhmal ...

Poetry

... vottrp. R U T 1.-FROM floOD'S rognis. SRtE stood breast high amid the corn, CIasp'd by ?? golsei light of monr), Like thle swe-etheart of the sun, W~he manay a glowin~g kiss haid wonl. On her Cheek anl Aotulmnf flush, LInIvits horn, Like red IMPeslll5goniil on It lna bar eves lher tresses fell, WVIch, ,ereblackest hone could tell; htetlonglushs vell'd a light That laid else beel all too bright ...

Poetry

... 4Octr))# THE1 liO18A~IMN IFU R~~Ttil. (igy Mlt. I111MANKII Anstiill22 thle green in bright with flowers I And3 ditlaoilln ilrogltit title Utiltily ho2u2r22, Llko ?? f~roml o1iiailalmr Oa it suildel2 wiolod by 0202ed2e12t to thle 0111111661112 0hr Andl la omi1yt fieullsl Ja Xty fli, lailr, 3mlt wlioro IN tile t2ly lhuntor-rout viat ?? 021 2 d22(2223 And22 $im2i2t, Ag:1ilu18 ?? Ir aliry proy ? ...

LITERARY VARIETIES

... LITERARY VARItES.I- A HcfV TO TrlE LAtIpS;-There Is not an;.ioqr in the day ii which, .a ma n so-much lks to see his wiforeseed with neat- ues3 as when she leavesierbedroom and site iowto breakfast. -Mrs. Ellis.. .. ANAGONISM.- We shall iever get on, eail Cromwell to hlis ?? Hanmpdeti after the battle of EdaehiiiO' with a set of poor tapeters- and town apprentice people flghtin against men ...

LITERARY VARIETIES

... The age of erusades, chivalry, romance, and minstrelsy was an intellectual spring among all the nations of the west.-Scldegel. CHsEnruLNESS.-It is better to ?? with a disposition tp see things on the favourable, side, than to an estate of ten thou- sand a year-Hsume. SERMON HEARING.-Beware of critical hearing of sermons greached by good men. It is an awful thing to be occupied In alan ing the ...

Literature

... Eiterature. The Robber. By G. P. R. James, Esq.-Smith, Elder, and Co., Cornhill, London. In the romance of The Bolbesr Mr. James leaves camp, and court, and battle field, and plunges into the greenwood. The incidents of his story are connected with the hall and forest in by-past times-in those times when the writer contends that England was | merry England ; but when, whatever might be the ...