LIVERPOOL SOCIETY OF FINE ARTS

... LIVERPOOL SOCIETY OF FINEI I - - ARTS. At the private view of the society, which was most numerously and fashionably attended, the saks were enormous, aniounting to something like £1500 in the first four hours. The competition for soae of the favourite works was very keen. Now that the statuary is placed, the hall has a most stately and attractive appearance. Indeed, until this society came ...

CLOSE OF THE ROYAL AGRICULTURAL SHOW

... CLOSE OF THE lROYAL AGRI- . CULTURAL SHOW. . X Friday was the concluding day of the show fa which was thrown open to the public, at a charge Di Argl Is. each. The admissions were about 5000 in excess whit of those on the preceding 'day, and the visitors in Aed the aggregate were quite a different class of persons. Ao ADMISSIONS AND RECEIPTS. Ahs The following Showvs the number of admissions MO ...

LIVERPOOL LIFE

... - CHAP. XXII.-POLICE, PRISONERS. AND PRISONS. Where lives the man who has not tried How Mirth can into Folly glide- And Folly into Sin? Gentlemen of the shade-mintons of the moon * * * A purse of gold most resolutely fnatched On Monday night and most dissolutely spent on Tuesday morning. got with swearing, and spent with crying. Now in as lo an ebb as the foot of the ladder. and by-and-by ...

OMNISCIENCE

... :, OlNMISCIENCE* ?? ; Tkere ian eye that ever sweeps The vast ireation through. Watch over myriad worlds it keops, A wide encircling view ; All beings, systems, times doth scan Which form the universal plan. Ocean, with its abyss of waves, That searching glance explores; The desert, the profoundest caves, The isles, the lonely shores, The earth, the air, the starlit sphere, Mirror'd to that ...

THE VILLAGE PRIDE

... THE VILLAGE PrIDE. 'Twas on a lovely summer's eve I sought the village green, And there a merry group had met To bail a festive scene; I paused to gaze upon those forms, So full of joy and glee, For ?? gay and guiltless sports Are ever dear to me But one I saw amid that throng, A little fair-haired child, Who joined with eager heart their sports, And gaily sang and smiled I asked her name of ...

REVIEWS

... - . 7 1. Tice Pcople's -ife'lic'l JoI1ranl (,n(I linniilq Phy- inud sicw??. Edited by Thomas Harrison YVeonian~, with AM. D)., Author of ?? CMISuMuptiOl, Asthina,'' ciscn, hecadlaches,' Jnldigcstioun, &C. pens: As a celspl anld authentic gulideo for, th.e prcserva- stand tiomi of health, itnd at repertory of medical science, its ci now for thle first tunei popularising valuable know- to le ...

REVIEWS

... REvIEAVS. v ?? l , ~ . . . , ?? . v. v The Ccord-player's Hand-booke; or. a Gasre at Forty- in i fives. a1 go This is a small book appropriately published at this sea. sode I son by Mr. E. Howell, of Church-street. It contains maint atrctions for beginners, the method of' playing and pee Linnting, laws of the gain~e, &c. that, the co Bentley's Miscellany, for January. The %a Ano ...

AT DALACLAVA

... AT DALACLAmA. AT JALiAUbJAVA. (Ffrom til3 ye rnore J rnaI a qt OoMwerce.) U Charge ! rung a voieC Aloui tho waiting lineS: Likse saddean uinld T'ilat strikes the forest Pines, AnI tiaoa drops dead upon the leaves it stirred, fi % f wibh a dead sound, that cruel word. (:;lirge? why, 'twas 'vild I- V t;.rn ?? bold their breath, 'Iso make the braves of Albion i ciiarge the realms of death I C; ...

A NEW SONG

... The Soldiers wremu coi nto Town. rb . W b eho tO town; , . . . -- For what, do you think 7 I'll tell Ye- TO raise the price of breA and beer, AId pinch the poor man's belly VWhet shall we do? -what will you do? What will the poor electors do? Frbos Mackenzie wants a place- The Scot Is no that silly: Hie wishes you to send him back, Cad to the Derby Dilly. What can we do? 7 . Mackenzie's a ...

INDIA

... and The following lines, written by a gentleman of UIver- Clit: pool, were intended to be delivered as a prologue to an car anatour performanoe in aid of the fund for the relief of atol the sufferers in India:- Alt All bounteous Nature, with ?? smleo on] And teem Ing verdure bleet fair India'saell- BUr Where Agra, Delhi, Cawnpore~ proud, cu~tain R* ?? costly temples and her holy fails ma Now ...

THE EXHIBITION OF INDUSTRY

... Q - -l - w. o - ?? or - x .. . ?? . ?? in On Saturday a meeting of thle local commnittee for pro- lie motingtho objects of this exhibition was lield in the Council- ag chamber of the Town-hall, for the purpose of meeting Dr. p- Lyon Playfhir, who attended as a special commissioner from h. London to ascertain the progress made in Liverpool, and 'st afford any inforniation which might be ...

THE FULCRUM TO LIFT THE WORLD

... THE FULCRUlM TO LIFT THE WORLD. (Fromt the 'ntblic Good.) be to Rcareely in our English language m Can he found a word more sweet, gl Than the one our childhood's lispings tib Learn so early to repeat; at From tile hulble, toiling peasant, to To the Queen upont her throne, C. Not a heart btit hlats responsive k To the magic spells of }Hoile. v Birthplace of thle soul's flfibetionos t Love is ...