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Bristol, England

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19

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19

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Literature

... li tca atit 1l¢a s5''mlum otl/lmml 'lt ?? Ogactl th Jaymoarket, London. 'Tme mm lilmg9 sof Sit- Wal ter Scatt awakened an interest in the breamsi a t e t 'ouilrieOU I t empert ms Seortish ?? mnd suba jecms Olmit 1msc tieser mie' slitinbered. Work after work has teen .uce'il ' pu' esard mith the view of presenting to tile eye tihe localitivi rendm'red mnemnoraxble by the events of ?? )r the pmn ...

The Drama

... Ate Drama. On Monday last Mr. Macready, whose engagement has been continued during the past week, appeared in Shakpere's tragedy of Jrcbe~ll, as the hero of which it must, we think, be generally conceded he has no successful competitor. It was gratifying, if only as affording evidence that the love of the Shaksperian drama is not extinct in Bristol, to witness the crowded attend- ance: the ...

LECTURES ON ART

... LECTURES OX ART. Mr. Uippingille gave his first or introductory lecture on paint- ing and the fine arts at the room of the Bristol Athenueans, on Wednesday evening last. There was a highly respectable auditory, among whom we recognized many of our local artists. The Rev. E. Bromley introduced the lecturer as a pi-devant citizen of Bristol, and reminded the company that, three and twenty years ...

LITERARY VARIETIES

... LITERARY VARM11T3S. Cunning pDY8 no reglrl to virtue, .UdI i, but the low mimic of wisdiOnI-ot'livjt6roke. T111: Ilyr(CUMrr t Ile wli the manl Who stole the lirery of' the Court of' Heaven To serve the devil in. InI holy phrase tralsacted villanics 'Ibeat common iinnersi durst not meddle with. At sacred feasts, lie sat among the saints, &nd wit hi guilty hands toullched hollest things; With ...

Poetry

... ? jooctr._V. IJIELANDe6 DISTRESS. '~'ttNCF that wild cry'? hlarboeir'tl are all our ablpm, (to r meeetof-witi prepare not jor' the flegitt Whenre itht ?? Cry', thien, from it thitsinjad lilis, Lotllct'ao condortitee, piercing dleptth anti height Out' erotica moren to, neither, tramp of Inca Nar toll tel druetar Is board hat town or glen Why (1i011-0, n'Iv~ that shout-tilai W-rotelleet wail? ...

LITERARY VARIETIES

... BEAUTIFUL SAYiNG.-While we wrangle here in the dark,we are dying, and passing to the world that will decide all our con- troversies, and the swiftest passage thither is by peaceable holiness.-Bauter. EFFECTS oF NEwSPAPERS ON ORDINARY CONVERSATION.- It is not to be doubted that the conversational power, as well as the graceful craft of letter-writing for which the last century was limous, has ...

FASHIONS FOR FEBRUARY

... Materials of light colours arc confined to in-door dresses; Fekinecs, with alternate satin and silk stripers, or stripes cspou. indes, brocldes, &c., poults do soie, plain velvets, ottomans, or ninWglds, are fashionable for high dresses; rediugotes, cavalieres, Vitehouras, for carriage, visiting, or promenade dresses; gi6p, lace, and fur, form at this moment thle usual trimmings, except. ing ...

LITERARY VARIETIES

... | Vo~eNI-No man ever spoke contemptuously of women with- out having a bad heart as well as bad head. A CONsOLATORY PEcEcDeNT.-All degrees of nations begin with living in pigsties. The king or the priest first gets out of' them; then the noble, then the pauper, in proportion as each class becomes more and more opulent. Better tastes arise frout better circumstances; and the luxury of one period ...

FASHIONS FOR JANUARY

... FASHIONS FOLD JANTUARY. Dresses of dama. with wreaths stli~eps, monres antiquers, trboch6s; wrveilles, and various other ridl materials are equally taehionablc for sewifces, as visiting dresses, according as te eo. louro aire light or dark * small bonqdets of feathers are used to ornament the rmoimes hroctdls in gold or silver, each confined by an ornamuent of preecous stoue; oto dresses of ...

LITERARY VARIETIES

... LITERARY .4XARIETIES- ITrUZ Cose'7Vreot' VT.--t is right to be contented with what we have, but never with what we tire, though the exact reverse is the ease with most ?? J. ackni7tosel, EXERCISE ;S only beneficial when taken With a good will, and ?? with a zest; a maln who should walk but two or three miles, grumblinI ?? the way, would be as tired at the end as though ie had walked twenty in ...

Poetry

... boEtryJ. SONEN TS-INSCOIBED TO SIR HAERIS NICOLAS.* I. A MiONUMENT to England's darling son- Thian brand or stone more durable-whereon Men now may etarly read that euro andu bright Was tbe flne spirit that in fadeless light, tins left Its huo upotn this glowing Pagel llolour be thino, Who withi piolis real, Ihis lloltiltelit hast rear'd, and tmade us fee Thai good aisretiant was the hero-cage ...

Literature

... R ttrattur C. olhn'. sland n d ?? -Hewioirs cf Co,eenl Ru~tihinson. Written kie vlit Widow. 1is'y.- - [eiry G. Bello, York-street, Covent- garden, I ?? tsjolonel Miotchinson wee one of the ornanments of the Cjrom- wellimin era--a tirin fri'ind of liberty, and remnarkably freo front1 the foll:c~ andi fanatictinm of the times, lie wits governor ofl Noisttiigani-cissiie, and nobly bore Ids pert ...