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WELSH POETRY

... rrs YSBRnD0oN ANUNa' gan Iorie,'tlb Glan AIed. I It There are four or five points which should never be l slost sight of in estimating the merits of any poetical a scompo ition. As poetry is a very powerful moral 1. agent, exercising great influence for good or for evil, t h and forming, as it generally does, an index to the , n moral condition of society, it is of the first importance tnto ...

Poetry

... docttr. THE NATIONAL ANTHEM. P EFLLYCHIAD. b 0! Dduw ein HargIwydd da, t Cadw Victoria, t! DOW cadw hi;i Bydd iddi 'a dyner Dad, a Er lies a Iiavydd ein gwlad ; Rbag y derfysswal gad Duw cadw hi. p A'th ddwyfairj waewffon e Chwfll ei gelynion, P Na chlyw eu cri a Alltudia 'n chwyrn o'n gwladt Bod camwedd, lhid, a brad: d Ein trugaroccaf Dad, a Duw cadw vhi. c Teyrnasedi hon yn hir, I gynal ...

Our Library Table

... our libratp Zable. 1TAIT'S MAGAZINE for June contains the 1 usual number of articles, and there are two clever littll fictions now continuing in its pages.-, A Chirist- g1k inas Vacation in Jutland, and Joe -Loclksart's Sal Dreams, by Will. Carlton. The article entitled. ihe South African Repu~blic;-hsow to keep. a Colony, o contains some valuable information relative to the pie, Cape ...

Our Library Table

... ?? Alibra Tabkle. I' THE DF.STRUCTXVE ART OF HEALING; OR, FACTS FOR FA!1ILIES, is the title of a little pam- phlet which we have seen advertised with a highly laudatory remark. It is now sent to us; and, as in duty bound, we have perused it. The author some time since published a work called FALLACIES OF THE FACULTY; and he here keeps up the quarrel with medical men which le commenced in ...

Poetry

... - -- - t- THE HERMIT'S SOLILOQUY. When howvling blasts around me cast Their vengeance and their spleen, When on the brink of death I shrink, Unheeded and unseen; To Him in silent prayer I turn, Who ne'er the contrite heart did spurn. When sickness dwells within may cell, And human aid is vain; No soothing balm my fears to calm, Or to relieve my pain; To Him alone for aid I call Who meekly ...

Our Library Table

... Our librain Zable, Last week eve introduced our readers to Mr.t Gerstaecker's JOURNEY ROUND T'IE WOIRLD;-I this, we purpose to make them acquainted with C Mr. M'Cann's Two THOUSAND MILES' RIDEI E'IIROUGII TIPE ARGENTINE PROVINiCES : a work replete with information and entertainment; and r fully realizing the sentiment of the motto in the v title page, that A truthful melange of scenes ...

Poetry

... voctiv. ?? MUSIC WITHOUT WORDS. Mr, bopes vwont take it amiss If he send her his plan of a Musical Kiss; And notes in a stave the peculiar conditions He thinks ought to regulate hissing musicians. A con spirito movement he would not dispense with, It being a popular style to commence with; Expressive and fine-though he cannot endure a Staccato, much less an apoggiatura. Then, melting and ...

Poetry

... 31loctip. v PORLI'HAET1HWY.* Dark be thy waters, 0 sor r owful river! M4ournful their music for ever and ever; Tenderly, proudly, thy mem ry be cherished, Forthbethwy where Cambria's minstrels perished. Here flash'd the last solemn gleahis of her glory, Here stood the Roman, triumphant and gory Dark be thy wvaters, 0 sorrowful rival, And mournful their music for ever and ever! -Martl., in its ...

Our Library Table

... Our Iibrai? gable. BLACKWOOD this month opens with a mos, delightful article on The Paradise in the Pacific,' as the writer calls Pitcairn's island, and it is quite sufficient to make us wish we could spend a few days amongst the happy and primitive people who inhabit it. Founded on a recent publication by the Rev. T. B. Murray, secretary of the Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge, ...