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Poetry

... pear)). SONG.-By CHARLES SWAIN. So mournfully she gazed on him As If her heart woald break; Her silence more upbraided him Than all her tongue might speak ! So monrnfully sie gazed on him, Yet answer made she none; But teara that could not be repressed, Fell 8slwly, one by one. I hoied, she said-but what she hoped In blushes died awa Y: I thought, she said-but what she thought Her tears ...

JENNY LIND's SECOND CONCERT

... In consequence of the unprecedented success which attended Jenny Lind's ?? on Monday at the Theatre (a notice of which will be Jound in our sixth page) Mrs. M_ Cready. with a view to meet the disappointment occasioned to many hundreds of persona to whomashe had been compelled to refuse admission, applied to the fair vocalist to prolong her stay in thia city for one night more. At first she ...

Literature

... 31ittrattive. '/lie 'letynitstei aunit Foreign Quaerterly Revietv.-G. Luxford, Vhitefriars-street, London. The Westminster for October contailnsa pleasing mingling of the useful and the agreeable. TIIe opening article, onl the 'Improvemnent. of Lanled Property, will be found to contain many valuable hints bearing on a question which is now of vital importance to the agriculturist, viz , the ...

Poetry

... Ioottip. THE ?? MISSION.-By W. J. LatiTON . The Poet's mission Is but prophotic vision: To hims the darilla heart is granted- Not the ?? t(he ,es inan of Jflerregsh. 1EAstN higher apprehending Ot the Poet's task! To him are God and Nature lending Ore of mnighty thought, That. fir such use as the world's need may ask, Fit iron may be wrouight. The passionate Imtpulse furnaced lit the Poet's ...

LITERARY VARIETIES

... The flatery of others would not isljure us, if we (lid not flatter ourselves. SOLITUDE.-Little do men perceive wbat solitude is, and how far it extendetlh; for a crowd is not company, and faces aire but a gallery of pictures, and talking but a tinkling cymbail, whsere there is no love.-Bacon. If everything liars below happened as thou eouldst wvieh, in every particular, even the most minute, ...

LITERARY VARIETIES

... LITERARtY VAlUEP L'1h. TASTE AND ELEoANCE, though they are reckoned only among the suniller and secondary morals, yet are of no mean import- sance hi the regulation of lilb. A inelial taste is not of force to turn vice into virtue; but it recomlnends virtue, with something like the hlaisdishsenats of pleasure. -Bfrke. CAPTAIN BUNSe3Y ON PRoBABILITIES.-If so be (returned Banisby, with untusnlil ...

Poetry

... jRoctr-P. _ A MOONLIT STROLL. IN the merrv moonflioht, when vows are ligh!t- IN-he, the pieaqatlt breeze sweet love tales heareth- When thle ?? s ?? high speak poesie, 'T ts thee tile young heart dareth I IT is thea that the tremulous whispers tell Tile heil ried story of Love's strong spell; Tile time of thc eloelenrt glance and sigh, Wills hmidden lips ?? Bind reply. Rultling hetweern the ...

Literature

... iEfteraturyt. svr11 Tile Philosophy of Lfe.andphiosopA!/ofiangutage. By Frederickrt ron Sc/sgge.-H-. G. Bohb, Y ork.st., C ovelut-garden, London. This is another valuable addition to the Standard Library, and one requiring little more at our hands than the brief an- t nouncement of its publteation. Frederick Schlegel's writings, and the taste and philosophical spirit by which they are ani a ...

LITERARY VARIETIES

... WALKING-Walking is good; not merely stepping from ?? to shop, or fron neighbour to neighbour, but stretching out into the country, to the freshest fields, and highest ridges, and quiet lanes. However sullen the imagination may have been among its griefs at home, here it cheers up and smiles. However list- less the limbs may have been seotainiog a too heavy heart, here they are braced, and the ...

LITERARY VARIETIES

... T'ilE ToNGuE.-By examining the tongue of their patient, physicinl ?? the diseases of the body; and philosophers, the disv:iwes ou the ?? Extracts. CONVERSATION.-To speak wvell, it is requisite to have a great deal of Mlt, and an excellentjudgment. Some who do not talk mnuli, listem with so much attention, that it is plain they under- staold what Wit is, and have a good deal ?? Gethill. TilE ...

Poetry

... Igo4etrv. BRIDAL SONG. CosE, gentlemen, good friends and lorers, ?? dear ?? one and all, Bv that blest zeal the heart discovers In lionollr's voice and Duty's call, Fill each your wivne.cup-mihd me, brilmful In thlY your hotmage is Implied; Now drink and toast, in chorus hymtifttl- Joy to the Bridegroom and the Brlide! Hark, hark I o'aeu now, as wye are singing, Thc bells of sweat Saint ?? ...

Literature

... Efterature. lwa H/artine's Hbtsoy of the Girondists, Vol. 2. Bohrn's Standard Library. Mallet's Northtern Antiquities, Bo/n's Antiquarian Library. Ii. G. Bolin, York-street, Covent-Garden. The latest volumes from the prolific press of Mr. Boln, and both signal specimens of the cheapness and excellence of the works published in his valuable series. Tise second volume of La Martine's History has ...