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Devon, England

Access Type

876

Type

876

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LITERATURE

... in his own nature more jealous than to be satisfied easily I I do reject all those, therefore,' says Herbert, ' that would speak against her honour in those times they staid in France. But I shall as little accuse her in this particular of her affairs ...

EXETER LITERARY SOCIETY

... vigorous, and his days have been spent in the arduous pursuit of great scientific truths. With an ardent love i for science he speaks easily and pleasantly; and he enriches his remarks with a fine vein of imagination, in order to render popular comments which ...

LITERATURE

... decidedly popular. The tenets advancedf are' sometimes those on which there wrill be mnuch difference' of OpiniOn; bat, generally speaking, the viewsB of' the-. wrriters are givenain aclever and unprejudiced manner.. Diversity of sentiment is, at present,, inseparable ...

EXETER LITERARY SOCIETY

... said e very man fought not for himself but for his cause. The lecturer then went on to speak of Charles, whom he asserted to be a mighty liar,-one who could not speak the truth,-supporting his assertion by referring to the discovery of the letter so well ...

POETRY

... and great, Rich in real glory'? Would ye lose march bitter cace In your lot below'? Bravely speak nut when and where 'Tis right to utter No. -- Learn to speak this little word In its proper place-A Let no timid doubt he heard, Clothed with sceptic grace ...

POETRY

... the proud little minx, wrapt in bear's skin and lynx, Just looks like a diamond in cotton, Her cheeks red as rose-we won't speak of the nose- Oh ! beauty's a delicate thing; Of arose on the cheek any poet may speaol, But of a rose on the nose see can't ...

POETRY

... prophetical, Flow from the quills of these eminent men. Likewise MGregor, that brilliant Glaswegian, Whom we desiderate always to speak; Hath. by the aid of some second-sight Stygian, Promised us shortly two millions per week. I Whaur shall we pit it, sirs?' ...

LITERATURE

... by Ralph Waldo Emerson; and every lover of literature wil be gratified with its perusal. Of Emerson's style we need not now speak-its beauties, its peculiarities, its faults, have become already familiar. Yet the impartial critic xwill at least say that ...

POETRY

... from America, delivered a lecture ot the Antiquities of America. Ir. T. Latimer in the chair. The lecturer commenced by speaking of how vivid were hisfeelings on visiting the ruins of antiquity in England, ard with what particular interest he had regarded ...

EXETER LITERARY SOCIETY

... Germanv, his return home in dire poverty, the strange vicissitudes he encountered, and his ultimate celebrity. Yet, if report speak true, he did not bear prosperity as well as he did adversity. His poetical compositions were fine, and in many instances of ...

POETRY

... Round my corollal of blue. And peep otut half afraid, IN purple robe array'd, And there's a little brook When morning to me speaks Goes singing round my nook, And breathes in zephyr sighs In which I often look ' Rise, little miss, arise I a pretty little ...

POETRY

... a voie - a persuasive voice, That could travel the wide world through, I would fly on the beams of the morning light, And speak to men with a gentle might, And tell them to be true. I'd ?? fly o'er land and sea, Wherever a human heart might be, Telling ...