Poetry

... _ _ ottrp. SONNET. Love, dearest lady, such as I would speak, Lives not within the humour of the eye; Not being but an outward phantasy, That skims the surface of a tinted check, Else it would wane with beauty, and grow weak,- A-s i the Rose mado sumsner,-and so lie Amongst the perishable things that die, Unlike the love which I would give and seek Whose health is of no hue to feel decay, ...

A ROMANCE OF LOVE AND MARRIAGE

... ROMANCE OF LOVE AND MARRIAGE. Coachmen and guards—guards in particular—time out of mind, have been proverbial for their gallantry ; and events justify the conclusion that the modern race do no dishonour to their predecessors in tnis particular. It not, therefore, to be wondered at that Mr. Robert Moore, guard of the London and Holyhead mail, he passed every day through the Abbey Foregate, ...

THE REGISTERED PALETOT CASE. To the EDITORS , > (he LIVERPOOL MERCURY. Ge*ti.kmk*, —In your report of the ..

... tho Vice Chancellor of England on Saturday, June 12th, you describe ourselves as receiving the protection of the Cuurt infringement of our patented riplit to an invention, and by assumption the title which it has been publicly known. From the great popularity we have attained by the sale of the subject of the injunction, a garment styled the Registered Paletot, of Llama Cloth, it may be ...

Imports

... , . EAST IXDIES. T-iniVv Mk''J7.„ fugfir ' ,i( . e «jte,cutch, linseed aplt>, K e. fm Calcutta ; 6ug tr, r:ce, jute, saltpetre « • l^blES. Science,'llnnsniTi, fm Jamaica ; Miuar, rum, logwood Thovpe, fm ; su-jar, molasses ► an loach, lli., foi Denier *ra ; rum, sugar, bides camera, Boycj, Jiavannih ; sugar, logwood SOU Til AMEHI C A. qua tor, Fo dyce. fm V ilparais >; wool, citrate soda ...

LITERATURE

... LITER AT U F. gas New books, prints, inusic. &c. intended forir'view rmay be left at Mr C. Mitchell's General Advertiing and Pllb- lishing Olfice. London, addressed to the Editor of this paper, when they will be duly forwarded, and receive at- tention. The Nortz Britis7 Review: No. XTIi. FREQUENTMv as we have expressed a favourable opinion of the general merits of this periodical, it is now ...

POETRY

... U THE LANGUAGE OF THE LENVES. f ___________ h 2O. M-._THE SCO0CII F1R. t On the barren waste, or bleak hillside, r I firmly take my stand; v From cold or storm I scorn to bide- t I'm the child of a mountain land. 0 WVhen the lovely shrub and the stately oak V Muist their verdure and leaves resi nt11 I fear not the frost, nor the tempest's shockl, For they make no change on mine. No perfumed ...

LITERARY VARIETIES

... r SOUT5Ev ON DEVON8SHIRE.-Devonshire is an ugly county. I have no patience with the cant of travellers who so bepraise It. l They have surely slept all the way through Somersetahire. Its trivers are beautiful, very beautiful, but nothing else, High hills, all angled over, and no trees. Wide views and no object. SCANDAL.-The love of deprecating the character of our r neighbours can only have ...

Literature

... Utcratua. H> If Honrs mrith the Best Author s. Ay Charles Knight. Vot. 1. Charles Knight, Ludgate-street, London. Helf ?? with the Best Authors is an excellent idea admirably worked out. Gems from our best authors are pre. sented in a neat and compact form, the several extracts being prefaced with short biographical notices of the writers. Few men are better calculated to carry through a ...

LITERARY VARIETIES

... ?? poorest being that crawls the earth, contending to save itself from injustice and oppression, is an object respectable in the eyes of God and man.-Burke. A very fool is he that chooses for beauty principally ; his eyes are witty, but his soul is sensual; it is an ill band of affection to tie two hearts together by a little thread of red and wbite.- Jeremy TayJo-. TuE PLAINEST ROAD.-Choose ...

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 ...