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Manchester, Lancashire, England

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LITERARY EXAMINER AND TIMES

... | LITERARY EXAMAM ill - ';iieat.eit~. -a -; t es -itc je. ~ ~~~-Teeit er trp Gi f rq a- 101 re i 6J to 'Poety. By George E *and MyraSarqenl. Flioreizcnr al Arnott; or, Is She Generous fnf INfatd Classes; with anintrod, ctioll on In fint Class Teaching g le TheTahrs Fried. No; 1.-4 Bblical and r. Is. Thze agelogl ictionary, No. 1. London: B. L' Green. rt ed. e age of rational juvenile ...

SELECTIONS FROM THE QUARTERLY REVIEWS AND MONTHLY MAGAZINES JUST PUBLISHED

... ikh s Ef~i E a T I 0 N S Dn; JUST PUBLISHED. A iiOtJ BNTLEY'S MISCELLANY]al igTHE T BLTU'0'T`TFE, INN. 'fli traCO.V4T1 69EBi~iA OF G.- PS'ZTZBRi.) WhI 0 cthl~ Intar itdrw It 1nuuumbeod smos'rovealed Laviewf.wt cci Mly simple theal upon it-sprendl, fec I read and sipped, and sipped anti read; ?? many a thought across me came,ti st ~While ponderitig over many a natme. Ac~dT&6e%1qj stout. and ...

THE LAPSE OF TIME

... ta ._ _- _ _ _ _ _ _. ter OY IV. c. ]BRYANT. ~ee 0y Lenent who will, in fruitless tears, lie The speed with which our momnents fly; is I sigh not over varnished years, rid But watch the years that hasten by. tal Look how they come-a mingled crowd ug Of bright end dark, but rapid days; 'th Beneath them, like a summer cloud, 3g The wide world changes as I gaze. to What ! griove that time hos ...

HAPPY OLD AGE

... EOR1GINAL.I BY JOgs1 CnttTCelly JaRINCE. 0 I feel that age hasovertu'en g My steps on life's descending way, I But time has left no lingering pain, e No shadow of an evil day; o And you, my children, gather near, 'To smooth and solace my decldne, And ye are peaceful, dutoous, dear,- Oh! why should I repine? r. Not all exempt has been my siy a From fitful storm and lowering cloud, lA But eun ...

EXHIBITION OF WORKS OF ART

... I E - D(~T ASAA\ToWVQT.'R TPqTTTUJT1ON. C AJ~j.LN 'JJco] ROYAL MANCHESTER INSTITUTION. b [CONTIUED.]thi 804. The Forsaken One. Henry Johnstone.-How often de a fine artistic thoughat-caleulated, fin right hands, to develop ad. itself into a sublimity, is frittered away becomilaii impotent hc and miserable. The work under notice, good ini Concepti on, of fair in composition, and in other ...

AMATEUR THEATRICAL PERFORMANCE

... |I Y The amateur performance by members of the ManchesterT In ?? id Shakeperian Society, inid d of our Free Library, came offon of le Monday last, at the Theatre Royal, to a large and evidently at a much-gratified audience. Indeed, as far ns laughter might a r-indicate, these novices in the dramatic art produced as much e- satisfaction to those assembled to witness their efforts, as though a ...

Literary Extracts

... afterarg Extracto. lb n BAXTESR'S PULPIT.-Kidderminsterwhere Baxter preached th t ns, with seach marvellous success, being at no great distance uti lo t from Worcester, I took a ride thither with one or two friends, he the nod walked a long time in and about the church in which bv lie preached, and in which the people, it is said, are now 11i he taught no doctrine similar to his. H-is pulpit ...

AFTER THOUGHTS OF A CONTINENTAL TOUR IN FRANCE, SWITZERLAND, &c

... AFYTER THOUGHTS . OF A CONTINENTAL TOUR . ;IN. FACE, SWITZERLAND, &c.. ire The splendour falls on castle walls, ?? alv A~~nd Snowy sumemits, old in story; L il -The-long light shakes across the lakes, se 1ev And the wild cataract leaps in glory. Si I Blow, bugle, blow,- set the wild echoes flying; in ' Blow, bugle, answer echoes, dying, dying, dying! anc s Oh, hark! Oh, bear ! how thin and ...

[ill] OF ORNAMENTAL ART

... ONORAMENTLART. J rjTsgday8 evening, to the stu- Us ,,M, On ?? f -Pi-n th 11 i.nluln II Toes~a evening, gave to the sint- S. lV~oeilA tirschool of Design the concluding li ,JoCne0 er enataelll art,~ in the delivery of Sui tiet eeoed now for a period of three yeors, sniaeola1111 of0 design existing in thle b3 Jareai - tie his bearers that Iin the lecture fit gol real ?? h had divided the lhjst ...

Literary Extracts

... 1: , I '41 itcrar ? Extra 'to. -,I- H~oive-Hope is ita slenlerre-e~d f~o~r aLs'to-ut' man to l ea n on, ly bat i's strong enough, I do suppose, for them that's infirm USI * f mnind and purpose. The houses Hope builds are castles t~ ~nthe air. The houses of the wretched'who are altogether without hope, are too dismal to live in. A slight infusion of IId hope may be prescribed in bad cases; ...

ART AND LITERARY GOSSIP

... t-Mr. Charles Mathews has returned to Drury Lane Theatre. He made his first appearance for the season on Monday lost as Marplot, in The Busy Body. d Migs Glyn has been delighting the patrons of the e drama at Birmingham with some of her fine interpretations of g Shakspere. It Mrs. Waller, an actress of merit, recently arrived r from Australia, and who has, been playing at the Theatre d ...

ELEANORE

... ''LEIANORUE p . li . ., , I , 1 ' . ; -.iOfaireita'vermiion: . . ?? u ion western skids, i ?? ?? .Wmslthe olsh of that -sweet Castilian ' 1 Girl With the deep brownieyes. - b 'As her happy learb grew firmer, a In the strange bright days of yoke-, ,e 0 ?? WI5d E Wdw md wtvinurjl Sw.tor thar musicel cadence ?? n ,F 'the'wind't1Aou'gh cedar and lfimeko2 , ?? maiden's . eart in the fresh spring ...