CONCERTS FOR THE PEOPLE—THE ELIJAH

... sceue whlere the child is rnised fron2 the dead--the vonih oil the I mounitain-the call uponr Israel to hear wliat the Lord speake'thor the rushing by of the elements, followed by the still -small voicee.' To each of these, as to other pas- sages we night ...

LITERARY EXAMINER AND TIMES

... tii 1rui f igf~ob he mbonk. a pcrtore,,by the ao ierc ?? I aa served, pipes warte Smoked en0ovrainidlt.i, ~th the hoc~s speaking a lifttl Piiisitisefadtoohr to Englishisan presens I - aftrad'l ndtat, uvbeihad-' ?? nie ce~ved'p. rt of ?? education itt ...

LITERARY NOTICES

... board. You may judge what a happy state we are ia -expecting the bailiffs every hour-t-no one we dare trust with anything or speak to;-all we say is carried of. It is a regular spy job. l'o pay rent is iopossiblo. so what is to be done, or what the end of ...

LITERATURE

... Pendeonis, swhose likeness to his Grace lied been Ce- a marked,, began to imitate him unconsciously. after they had parted, speaking Wills curt .aesteares, after ?? isastoaer of the great muan.- We have all of us, no ~doubt, met with mare thana fqpe military ...

The Drama

... of i considerable merit, and although there were parts oft her repre- sentation to which exception might be taken, it was, speaking generally, a clever performance. Ier delivery of the opening soliloquy, one of the most difuicult to give proper effect to ...

1850

... they cut it iheTter, So that we might be off to the Saraue on - I For our gin, and our pipes, aud our 1,'VXtOO Lightly we speak of thi party that's geto', Now all due respect his been paid hi ns Ali 3 little he reok'd of the lark that want otl Near ...

Poetry

... Poland, Burope's brightest gem, defaced! Does povoerof kings, in plunderonly shine, To tell the world theyreiga bylaws divine? Speak out eaok page, istoric t wet vorld, And let the Uar est page be nowv unftirled i wipe offthe the IefiljeW spots,' and let there ...

OPENING OF THE SALFORD BOROUGH MUSEUM AND LIBRARY

... proposed a vote~ofihankseto the hlaoua Owine ?? knew their ?? bud beien ot the'rmost onerousdscitnenhvntttraeaoioftecii- teo ?? speak with ?? fidleue ats to thea able - ivieauiaet f~~irplacise.) ment ihir.A1 ilnise seconded thie islotion. tcaaurnistauces iis ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... the Old Poets and Dramatists, %with other Literary Remains of S. T. Coleridge. Edited by Mrs H. N. Coleridge. Pickering. It speaks well for the dispositions of the existing reading public that new editions of these works should have been called for. The ...

THE THEATRICAL EXAMINER

... though somewhat over-grotesque impersonation of a villanous clerk. Mr Herbert looked capitally as a black servant, but his speaking was not up to the mark. However, the great respon- sibility of the piece lay on the shoulders of Mr Davenport, who played ...

Poetry

... :hhill Danube's rolling tide to ages tell, i ow tyrants conquered, and how freedom fell? -Or shall the waves of Thesis gladly speak, Of triumph glowing on the freeman's cheek, The harbinger of brighter triumphs still, When Dembinski shall bend each tyrant's ...

LITERARY VARIETIES

... preferred in parliament against the importa- . tion of corn, end I love to fellow ancient precedents. I think this bill truly speaks Dutch, and is for the benefit of the low ?? Lives 0j the C(hief-Justiees. .FRENCII-51ADE ROils- PooIr Rome ! how it is changed ...