Poetry

... eltrpl. WILD FLOWERS OF SUMMER. Wild flowers of summer, ye rise in our path, On the dew.sprinkled upland and fairy-trod path Ye brighten our steps in the forest'a deep shade, And ye meet us again iti the green-bosomed glade. From your moas-cotered couches reflected, ye gleam In the deep flowing river and clear gushing stream; By the bower of the lover ye gracefully wave, And ye shed your sweet ...

POETRY

... b_ ?? THE THREE SONS. I ha'e a son, a little son, a boy just flive years old, With eyes of thoughtful earnestne3s, and tuind of gentle mould; They tell me that tuosual grace In all his ways appears- That my child s grave aund wviso of heart beyond his childish years. I cannot say bow this may be, I know his face is fair, And yet hlsi sveetest cotaeliness Ia his mild and serious air; I know his ...

POETRY

... ?? P-0 E T R ?? THE PRISONER'S ADDRESS TO HIS MOTHER. During a visit to the Massachusetts State Prison, some time since, the Warden spoke with deep interest of a prisoner, whose talents as a poet had excited much at- tention. The following is from his pen:- I've wandered far from thee, mother, Far from our happy home; I've left the land that gave mne birth, In other chunes to roam ; And time, ...

FASHIONABLE INTELLIGENCE

... I FASHION,4BLE INTELLI The Qiieeni will hold a Privy Council on 9atbi f noon, at three o'clock, at Buckingham Palace. a'ter. lier lsl jesty nnd Prince Albert, ant the l Queen ot the Belgians, honoured the Italian opera sviti re presence on Tuesday evening. tber The Countess of tharlernont haq ?? the ?? of Desart as the lady in waiting to tue Queen. The Erla morley has succeeded Lord Byron as ...

THEATRICAL ERA

... | THEITATRICAL ERA. ;I THE LOAN OF A WIFE, AT E 1LYCEUM..; * Mr. Wigan is said to be the author ofthe neiw burletta at this theatre, thodgfh, judgin'g from the ingenuity .displayed in the construction of the plots we should imagine the piece; to be of foreign extrac2 'tion, and 'that 'rIT. W. stood in the relation of -its dramatic godfathers rather than the absolute parent of the affair. He ...

Published: Sunday 05 July 1846
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1317 | Page: Page 3 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

LITERATURE

... |ORIGINAL FAMILIAR CoRREsPoNaDn]Scs BETrWEEN HESI- D DENTS sIN 1XL, INCLUDING SSETCUES OF JAVA, &C- Edinburgh: Blackwood &- Sons. The letters in this interesting volume, while more immedi- ately attractive to the kindred minds thrown together at a M'ofussil station in Benga],1 will be perused with pleasure by all emlbued with the literary taste that so conspicuously ap- pears in the lamented ...

HER MAJESTY'S THEATRE

... HER IMlJESTY'S TIHEBA TRE. G]usI's ?? Voice wis never perhaps heard to greate ir ad valitage thtan1 lhist itlit it Anna .B7ehna. Iler is drainiatic power, her passionate feeling, her great vocal lls well as histrionic genius, were never more strltingly de- _ veloped. Continued expressions of delight followed her in vO every scene, end she was called for at the close of both ncd acts. She ?? a ...

France. —The Fatal Accident on tiie Great Northern Railway.—The primary cause of this terrible catastrophe has ..

... The following details from the Emancipation Beljc were collected on the spot by a medical man, who made the minutest inquiries, and they bear a semi-official character. On leaving Arras, about 600 metres before arriving Borax, the line has an inclination towards Douai of about 4 millimetres in the metre, and then ascends an inclined plana of 14 millimetre. It is at this point that the ...

EXPRESS FROM PARIS

... Daily New* Office, Saturday Morning. We have received by express the Paris journals of Thursday, with our private correspondence. The Momteur contains several promotions in the army, and various civil appointments; but we record only those which have political character. M. Quenault, a 1 leputy, whose re-election is doubtful, and who not very popular, has been appointed the seat (for life) of ...

REVIEWS

... tb The Hitorij pf t.'e Reformation of the 16th Century. of By J. If. Merle D'AubignO5.~ Edinburgh Oliver ng and Boyd. be It is oar belief that all nuntscreous seet, comsprising in their he ra ...

POETRY

... i'OETRY. TVl ER XET~O PLYIU-OOYOT.) (A MiaT~t~t1ULitBoDY,) I'm loa '¢ttihe cpzhee imoiipledt withl mites, And wheat thso' h ,Ilgalnc. be ¢un~ruly tA disciplo ofti',AfCgt i'lt bo. I'm a lau, hi~ng Plhlloo9op~ihOr1 itSbrly, ?? thorni dulty, t I nlever meet trouhles halt wvay. If they come, they're uc'er anxious to stay, The Grumhler who never estoys. The boautles bestowed upon narth, Who ...

COLONIAL

... Nhwfoundlajid.—Destruction op the Town or St. John's bt Fire.—(The following appeared in a Second Edition of Daily Neics) • —The Pearl, which arrived off Teigamouth on Monday, k«a brought particular! of most destructive Ire John's, by whioh that town was totally destroyed, The fire occurred on the •A of June. All mercantile establishments, from Messrs. Newman and Co.'s, at the head of the ...