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BATH AND WEST OF ENGLAND AGRICULTURAL ASSOCIATION

... I BATH AND WEST OF ENGLAND .: . AGRIOULTURAL ASSOCIATION. The second exbibition of tbisassociatiop, which e this (Wednesday) afternoon at Pennycomequick, a sio'G. distance from Plymouth, promises to be, both in extent and importance, one which cannot fail to be of great interest to those engaged in agricultural pursuits. The number of implements which have arrived is large, and comprises many ...

LITERATURE

... a- Books, Prints, Mfusic, 4w., for review, are requested to be left ol at Mr. C. 31ilchell'g, Red Lion Court, Fleet-sireet, London, l addressed To the Editor of the EXETER FLNVGe POST. These will be duly forivarded, and receive an early notice. L, The Poetry of Home, by Goodwyn Barmby. London; Wm. in Tweedie, 337, Strand. lo A poem in three parts, in which the writer gives utterance to the ...

LITERARY VARIETIES

... READY RECHONEnS.-We had to trust to the guides, whose ideas.of time and distance were most provokingly indistinct: besides this they have no comparative in their language, sothat you cannot say to them, A which is the longer of the two, the next stage or the last one ? but you must say, , the last stage is little ; the next, is It great? The reply is not, it is a little longer, much ...

POETRY

... 'POETRY GOOI) NIGHT. Good night.! a word so often said, The heedless mind forgets its meaning; 'Tis only when some heart lies dead, Onl which our own was lcaning, We heas in maddening music roll The last good night along the soul. Good night -in tones that never die It peals along the quickening ear; And tender gales of memory For ever waft it near, When stilled the voice-O, crush of ...

CHEPSTOW FLOWER-SHOW

... CHEPSTOW - F l s ~TheCl~~stiw riouturl &f gae io~fr# how(forthe- prsn artlfdaa a ylterbaothe an~ilefit e t adhe ts Usuaifl, the dunywas observed li the quietifold46wn as.oneffdalvltY andii ?? to tw orith ire l Icurrent epurnmStances. chief among vhicb' wutheclose'aplilel of thie'fe itiVitiat:l(P.oltyROolkparkI; the.attendance of residents of the ?? short of-its wonted number, aid- there was an ...

LITERATURE

... ,Bole8 Pin o, usc, -c. fr rvie, re requested to be let at M. C.Mitcells, Rd Lin CortFleet-street, London, addessd o te Rjto oftheEinrnnFLYING POST` Thes wil b duy frwaredandrecivean easly notice. Bllc oed's Magazine, June. fleeply11 interestinga indcstrflctive. The Paradise in the Pacific traces the formation of the primitive community at Pitcairn's Island, commnseicing weithi a succinct, ...

IMAGINARY CONVERSATIONS OF EMINENT MEN

... IIMAGIARY CONVERSATIONS OF EMINENT I MEN.. I (From ?? Press.) THE BlSHiOP OF OXFORD AN]D Mr0. COBDEN. oil Saturday Sir Williamrand Lady Mfoleswvorth entertainedat dinner the French-Ambassador and Madame Walewski, the Duke and Duchess of Argyll, the Earl of Aberdeen, Mr. Delano, Sir Jaines and Lady Graham, ir. Cobden, and the Bishop of Oxford.-Mrlorrigs Post, June 20. Bishop of OxFonD: I ...

Literature

... flitu at II r t. A Selection from thle Correspondence of the late Thomnas Chalmers, D.D, LL.D. Edited by his Son- in-Law, the ReV. WilliaM Hanna, LL.D.-Thoonas Constable & Co., Edinburgh. This may be regarded as a supplementary volume to the ad- mnirable life of his illustrious father-in-law recently published under the care of Dr. Hanna. An excellent feature of that biography was that Dr. ...

POETRY

... ¶IHE PEASANTRY OF ENGLAND. Tle Peasantry of England, The mcrry hearts anid free; The sv old may boast a braver band- Blut give the scythe to mec Give mc the fame of industry, Worth all your classic tomies' God puard the English Peasantiy, And grant them happy homes! The sinews of old Enigland! The bulwarks of the soil! HoW much we owe each manly hand, Thus fearless of its toil! Oh ! he who ...

Literature

... fit raturt4 t 2The Dubliut Universityp Magazine. ND. CCXL VI.-Wm. S. Orre and Co., Amen-coraer, Paternoster-row, London. eq A good average number of this excellent periodical. The t iopening paper, us one might almost expect, is devoted to what is at present the 1 great fact of the Irish capital, the Industrial Exhibition. This is succeeded by atale somewhat fantastic, but written with much ...

Poetry

... II t t THE SLAVE's DREAMI.-BY LONGELIOw. BESIDE the ungathered rice helay, tils sickle in tils hand: Bit brenst Nvas bnre-1t19 matted hair Wes burled In the sand. Again, hn the miSL and shadow o' steeP, lie saw his native land. Wide througil the landscape of hii dreams 't'hc terdty 'Igor flowed; Beiieatie the palm-trees on the plain Once ures a hein: he strode: Anid heard the tinklhing ...

Poetry

... Uttrll. THE ECHO. Tfou Nhaveon, that haunt'st these hanging rocks, ttusen, Oft have I in this grotto heard thy voice. It~s unnd wvse ?? my dear one spke And thou didst steai her words and spoke, a Oh I hadst thou. menory, Echo, could st thou bring That long-lost music back-this cave should be Thy temple, and myself thy worshipper. Alas I thy life i8 in the fleeting hour, Thou hast no heart to ...