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Bristol, Bristol, England

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13

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13

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Poetry

... woetrIv. VOICES FROM1 THE CROWD.-BY CliAIMMS 14CKAAY. DAILY WORK. wois lags for dread of daily work Atd isll appointed task would slhrk, Cmnmits it tolly std a crime: A soulless slave- A paltry knave- A clo- upon the wheels of Time. Wvith Work to do, mid store of health, The man's uniworthy to be free, WVho iill not Five, That lie may ive, Ris daily toil for daily fee. No! Lot us work I We ...

Poetry

... p.oetry. SONG. THouGn far away from me you fly, To seek for bitss elsewhere- To 1!11 your heart land feast your eye Vith visions gav and iair- fitill 'illial tilt, fcst ve joy 3S011 feel Sgome panwse, 0 lot ?? be; Alid sometillios to past ptleasures steal And than remeniber ne. For 0, amid the glittering scene, Where pomip and pleasure dwell: Whose beauty bright-,whose dazzling sheen l)ellght ...

Literature

... Rittrature. I i e W'estn.iastes Ieviezio; Io. LXXXLX.-G. Lnxford, White- friars' street, London. s The Westmiuster opens with an article on Electricity e and Galvanism. This is followed by a paper on The Ten- l dency of Puseyism.- The writer's opinion is, that there is no t stopping at 1' Puseyism.1 Puseyites must, by consistency, go 8 on till they have to choose between the two ...

LITERARY VARIETIES

... Zealous men are ever displaying to you the strength of their belief, while judicious men are showing you the ground of it,- Shensdone. JoY AND Sonlow.-Sorrows, by being communicated, become less, and joys reater; sorrow, like a stream, loses itself in many ?? and'joy, like a ray of the sun, reflects with a grater anrdour and quickness when it rebounds upon a man from the breast of his friend. ...

LITERARY VARIETIES

... LITERARY VARRTIES. A false friend is like a shadow or a dial, which appears in fine weather, but vanishes at the approach of a cloud, THURLOW ON LOUGHBOROUGH.-Lord Thurlowv survived his l rival more than a twelvemonth; and on hearing of his deat at Bath, said candidly, Well, I hated the fllow, ie Gould Charles tns better than I copld; but he was a gentleman I His dislike afterwards vented ...

Poetry

... VINottrp. RAIN IN SUMMER-BY PrOrESSOR LON~rELLOW. How beautiful is the rain I After the dust end heat in tueo brood stud fiery street, In tis narro iostv e How beautiful is tile rait ! o0w it clatters lutton the roots, Like tile trl tlip 05 hostst; Howv It gOuile5, alit struggleLS oat Frosn the throat of the overflowing Spout! Across tile windowv pane it pours anid poers, And swift atid wtido, ...

Poetry

... vuotri.l. ELEGIAC STANZAS. I11SCI5CnlnD ON THE TOM1 OF' A YOUTH. STAY, troveller! !or unlheding PaSs T 'sI'olli9 lllililal S~tolle901, IVIi tch sepea s ot biried youth and worti, A td Iopcs Ibr ever cfSwn. Trite though tdhe tale it tells, it claims Fm''l kvZerv' eve a tear: Even Pit'v hta9 er ir opingform, Awl w veps ot1t d watches here. It tiols of oiew eli5so hcart was pure, From geib' sillS ...

Horticulture and Floriculture

... porticulturi'anv sloriculturt. BRISTOL AND CLIFTON ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. The third show of the above society was held on Tuesday, at the Victoria-roums. The dotagon and large rooms were arranged in the usual tasteful manner, and the beauty and variety of the blooms exhibited rendered the show fully an average one. It struck us that the promenaders were some- what fewer thln on former ...

LITERARY VARIETIES

... MTERARY VARIETIES. SELF-LoVE.-Self-loveis at once the most delicate and most tenacious of our sentiments; a mere nothing will wound it, but nothing on earth will kill it. HEAD AND HEART.-No cultivation of the intellectual powers can atone for the systematic depravation of the moral sympa- thies: a good head can never compensate for a bad heart. PIsA CATZIEDRAL,-FeW churches in Italy are free ...

Literature

... ifterature. Ljronian Tales-Munray's Home and Colonial Library, No. X.XVI. John Murray, Albemarle-street, London. These tales are from the pen of the lady whose charming Letters from the Baltic were so generally admired and quoted at the time of their publication. The tales are three in number - The Disponent. The Wolves, and The Jewess, and are intended to illustrate life in Livonia. ...

FASHIONS FOR JUNE

... FASHIIONS FOR JUNE,. ilar6gea In large ohecki, grenadine de lane, with rayures camrnohex, tissu damas, and tarfetus glae6, are the fa-hionahle materials at this moment ; for the promenade, lace is the Wiluls- pensable accompaniment of every toilette, and dffunoes of Lice are no longer conlined to evening wear, but ire useut oa morrn- tug dresses of tillfetas brocl6. White silk Is f&thiowitbio ...

MEMS. OF A TOUR TO TINTERN ABBEY

... MEMS. OF A TOUR TQ TINTERN ABBEY. TRONt TiHE NoTE-BoOK OF o COCKNEY TOURIST. t (tCdt.)c Last week I left my intelligent acquaintance about to corm- mence his tale. He thus proceeded- e lipt wub ge ~oilante oi nter s. .,In the early part of the fourteenth century yonder singular rock presented, in all probability, a like appearance to what it does at this time, wvhilst the abbey differed ...