THE LEGEND OF MONTE PILATE

... THE LEGEND OF MONTE PILATF. SU*ORSTUD BY A SWISS TRADI5TION GIVEN IN THE 'DERBY a 3ERCUREy OF MlAY THE 8TH, 1850. S 'Tis said 'neath Pilate's rocky heights, Where gloomy storm-clouds keep Their shadowv watch, a spirit walks, r O'er waves that never sleep. a Darkly the mirror'd waters shine, v And rending tempests sigh, Where round the deep blue mountain lake a Dread portents meet the eye. i ...

SUDDEN TERMINATION TO THE Wednesday Concerts

... SUDDEN TERMWINATION TO TEE I Wedniesday Concerts. The WVernesday Concerts have terminated suddenly, and in a manner that reflects anything but credit ?? those musicians and vocalists wvhlo ' ore engaged for last WFednesday's entertainment, and this we shall attempt to show. Wedtne-sday last was to have given the eleventh con- cert of the springg series, with the second, appearance of Mdlie. ...

Published: Sunday 19 May 1850
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1322 | Page: Page 10 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

COME, NAME A GOOD FELLOW!

... COME, NAME A GOOD FELLOW' r- Come, nanie a good fellow Anid drink to his health No matter his rtation- No matter his wealth ! If the heart be but noble, en 'Tis title enough; 16 P Tis the heart makes the Mao no Though his fortune be rough he Theo lamllie a good fello', as And to him we'll driak is And our lip with a blessing, is Shall hallow the brink ! ret Come, aitne a good fellow , ies The ...

Selected Poetry

... `cltctrfrb 19actfp. OLD FrRIENDS 'MET TOGETHER. OiT, time is sweet, when roses iseet, With Spring's sweet breath around them, And sweet the cost, when hearts are lost, If those we love have found then I And sweet the mind that still can find A star in darkvest weather, But nought can be, so sweet to see, As old fiiends met together. 'Tlhose ?? of old, when yonth was bold, Aind tiiue stole ...

SPANISH LITERATURE

... SPA NaIfHf LITERA TURE.* ?? - Three exceedingly handsome volumes, containing some fifteenl hundred Pages of history, biography, anecdote, analysis, and criticisix ; illustrating a I thousand years of a national literature, from the Last of the Goths to the Prince of the Peace, and accounting for thirty years of the life of the eminent Americau whose name is thus magnificently intro- duced to a ...

COMMEMORATIVE BANQUENT BY THE COLDSTREAM GUARDS

... COMMEMORATME BANQUENT BY THE . ~1: COLDSTREAM GUARDS. i magnificent entertainment in the character of a bi- eentensry festi val was given on Wedneedayevening in the royal hanlqoetting-roomoC St. Janmes's Palace, by the offEi- cers. of the Coldatream Guards, to celebrate the 200th .anniversaryof the enrolmentof that distinguiehed corps by the celebrated General Mtonck, afterwards Duke of ...

The Fine Arts

... zie e*lile -arto. EXHIBITION OF PAINTINGS BY THE OLD MASTERS. [Conlinuedfroe our last,]I No. 21, from thle colleclloos of,1r. W. ilortimer, of Clifton, is A FrUit Piece, painted with great beauty and truth by 3Spaeckaert. Nothing oan'be more ?? tban the grapes 2ned peaches they bloom in all the ?? U nitoreure ad seofi ' is it but ant jour plucked froin thcir parent trees. Some drols of' dcw ...

Poetry

... pillourp. THE CHILD IN THE WILDERNESS.-By S.T.CoLERODGE. ENcINomTnan in a twine of leaves, That leafy twine his only dress, A lovely boy was plucking fruits, In a moonlight wilderness. The moon was bright-the air was free, And fruits and flowers together grew, And many a shrub, and many a tree; And all put on a gentle hue, Hanging in the shadowy air, Like a picture rich and rare. It was a ...

Selected Poetry

... $?rlrcttb 3,,)Cfrtro. OIT, LET MIE BE ITAPPY TO-DAY. EorrT r: for cachll day is the evil it brings Tf one day, then, be free froni dvll sorrowi Oh, chase not its joy by the sad littered fear That some trouble may rise oil the morrow. While clear an-i -ndimm'd is the bluc alch above, And the ?? glowes warm, do hot say That tenipests may rage ere the nighitshiades depart, Bait, ohl, let mle be ...

PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS

... PUBLIC AMUSEEX>T;t ROYAL S&ODLIlES WEXLLS THE&&Z I ?? _ ' -Intntc~r OF (Cli, P~rEL?. ?? ~ ~ ~ l.L0LTELL: OWTuesdar, art; Aeeg ?? T}Et Or 111151 rein. . * I tlr Eo. 'rltr ?? ~ F ~ ~ s, Enter Tr 'dC4dOL OF ItF.FO l .E Mr :storT6 MCr. klos ahirs O ir' W WAO TO PA1 OLO FEtTa. Sir iiles Overreacher etps; L rd rl, 5 I n hern .r. Il rt irirtoul; Justo,,edM.s ?? ?? -To Colnclude WII rid Daheelep, br. ...

LITERARY EXAMINER AND TIMES

... Literarn Lebefu[. C 2'he Briiish Qurl'ierly Revieu,. No.I2t, May!,1850. C London: Jackson and Walford. w ' The present is, we,think, one of the ablest and most; naeful of the numbers of this review. Indeed,,it m'ay'ybe said of the British Quarterly, vires acquirit eundo.,-'we B had occasion lately to refer to the increasing apprecia- 51 tion by the literary public of the talent which it ...

Selected Poetry

... -Sclcrtcb 130ttrly. YOUTH AND AGE. BY COfARLEs SWAIN. TnE proudest poetry of youth Is- Would I were a i1an ?? The golden years that lie between, Youth, like a drea, weould span 'Tis is its thought-'tis in its heart- Mus ever on its tongue; But oh, the poetry of age, It is-. Ifl/e, I ices young ! Thus, in the morn of life, our feet Would distant pathways find; The sun still faee to fane u-e ...