Refine Search

POETRY

... POETRY. SPEAK NOT HARSHLY. Speak not harshly: much of care Every hnunan heart must bear; Enough of shadows sadly play Aronnd the very sunniest way; Enough of sorrows darkly lie Veiled withiD the merriest eye. By the childhoods gushing tears By the griefs ...

POETRY

... cloud, and changing skies b hear the rusling of the blast . That through the snowy valley flies. Abd passing few are they who speak, Wild stormy month, in praise of thee; Yet though thy winds are lond aud bleak, Thou art a welomne month to me. Heorthoe, to ...

POETRY

... Thus ho becomes the darling of mankind, Armed with the instinct both of rule and right, And the world's minion, privileged to speak, Whon all beside-thc medley mass-are mote, Distils his soul into a scug-and dies. -Harcheser Atheusxam AIbnm, ...

LITERATURE

... renovation will:perhaps show us that beyond and without the measures of Henry the Eighth, there was something, every- thing so to speak, for therein was the essence of the Reforma- tion that which makes it a divine and imperishable work. In short, the progress ...

POETRY

... paused,-as I do now- Hist ! hark ! tread soft,-was that a shriek, Berst from yon suffering tbree;- Did that deep wail of murder speak, And hopeless agony ? The upraised arms, the imploring eyes, Proclaim dread horrors done,- Hush l 't is the Virgin-Mother's ...

LITERATURE

... the Welsh principality which as et yet his little or no connection with, or interest in, the busy outer world-which still speaks the Celtic tongue, and no other-which cannot read, and yet is in a certain degree intelli- gent, and which derives an extension ...

POETRY

... every way. o As for the more important matter, the literary ability displayed in the contents, we shall not take upon us to speak, for we have s scarcely yet found leisure to look into them; but we think we t may very safely recommend a publication that ...

POETRY

... With a grey frown there sat Calhoun, and slowly in his cheekt His quid he thrust, and slaked the dust, us Webster rose to speak. C Upon that day, near gifted Clay, a youthful member'sat, And, like a free American upon the floor he spat; Then tnrning rouid ...

LITERATURE

... wiitten in a plain practical style, bringing thezmatter witbinthe cognisance of un- derstandings of the meanest capacity. Mrs P. speaks warmly, and in a manner creditable to her feelings, of the destruction to which, as a too general practice, bees are, with ...

LITERATURE

... so inkeeping with the words spoken, that to his hearers it seemed alike im- oessible that the man could speak otherwise, or that any other culd, speak like him. To the students he appeared the imper- sonation of human wisdom and truth. His words sunk deeply ...

LITERATURE

... v The Professional, Company seems to have progressed at a tl very satisfactory ratio; and the writer, naturally enough, speaks h of its prospects in terms the most sanguine, bet swhich, on the fi principles bees stated, will, we hope, berealiscd. The ...

LITERATURE

... Montagu, and speaks lo his Map'le-Durbam friends of the condescension of. the; fahr epI in a way evidently intended to impress thena with anl idts of the high favour in which he was held by the court ladies. All these matters Wer Carrothers speaks of with ...