OPENING OF THE SCOTTISH EXHIBITION

... ot rust dhescribe thle gallery soil elartmenits below, which have us, baen done iii thle repel-I, aiid thle works ill which speak foir at th ele hilt I hope ttertf this briaf description of tilie i rirrarugoeciut will eiiable you uo lires-ot thle vorks ...

LITERATURE

... best they can of a bad cause? If every man ie allowed Ito accuse of mendacity his political opponent, where should Iwe he ? I speak of the political economy of the world as It a is, and noteas it should be. Happy are those who have truth twritten on their ...

POETRY

... sI Raves on bleak Crimean height, 0 Where the murky war-clouds roll t Over doomed Sebastopol I fi Balaldava t Inltermanl! b Speak the proud names hle can h Whore our English tongue is heard, h To his inmost soul Unstirred! bi Road who can with moasured ...

LITERATURE

... g the fortunes as well as the morals of the Russian nobility. But on these points it would be better to let our authoress speak i for herself. Here is a picture of serfdom in i Russia:- The chief cuisiuier in Madame ?? house at Twer belonged to a landowner ...

POETRY

... heart again? 'Did ron not fdl ?-but my tougae is weak Y6tu' sad sbort-comings to recal. And the Old Year sobb'd-he could not speak- He turud his thin lace to the wall. Old Year! Old Year! I've done you wrong- Hear my repentance ere yon die! Linger awhile ...

FAIRS

... THURSTS.-The January fair took place on Tuesday, and was tolerably well ?? with a good description of stck which, generally speaking, met a ready sa e at moet re,,U ' nerating prices. There was an excellent demand for well. conditiuned black cattle, but ...

LITERATURE

... took me and we dressed me; I walked about just as I do with these clothes, aul stood still, sat down. They said to use, ' Speak, say this, and rei sty that.' As to mes, what did I care for that? I spoke just ha right on. Oiice I represented a blind man-eb ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... of this one of Drake's voyages in the handwriting of the antiquary Stow, purporting to be drawn up by one John Cooke, who speaks as an eye-witness of all that he relates, and whose name, as John Cowke, occurs in other narratives. Cooke begins by stating ...

SELECTIONS FROM THE NEW REVIEWS & MAGAZINES

... greatest number of those wretched beings who have been a cas1t out of society only that they may make a trade of cor- ruptiog it, speak all too plainly of the loose state of discip. a. line in regard to those who are in a very important sense a meembers of our ...

Poetry

... Into eager listeners then. You might win our restless masses If you 'd speak but what you feel: This reserve all bounds surpasses, Which would love itself conceal. Love, and speak as love inspires you! Faithful words ne'er fruitless fail: And if God's ...

Original Poetry

... sufferer ponders o'er what has been, And watch his eye, ai the broad expanse Of Eternity breaks on his anxious glance Then speak of Time e'er his race is run, And learn its worth from that dying one. Chelsea. M. S. R. ENGLYN ION I G. Griffith, Ysw., a'i ...

THE FINE ARTS

... drawn and lithographed upon a larger scale, so that they are not to be included in the volume of which we have just been speaking. But these pictures are also of especial interest. Every one who was present, or had a relation present, at the bombardment ...