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Pickings from Punch

... vitftuiin fromn ipuacb.tp TEE REAL AN3WER TEAT WAS GavEN.-Lord S_y: Come like a good one, and join us, Gladdy. Mr. G-e: I d work with gou, but I shy your daddy. THE TRAvELLER s PARADOX.-A passport is as great a nuisance as a bottle-stopper. Os Coctass.-Surely tbe great discoverer of vaccination has an equal right with others In Trafalgar-suare to become more Jeflfer-allykon Oas~oue.--Lord ...

FASHIONS FOR JUNE

... Never since the days when George the Third was King has lace been worn in such profusion as it is at the present time. Certainly it must be admitted that no other trimming is so rich, light, and delicate. Every now and then, when taste and ingenuity are exhausted in the invention of new trimmings, capricious fashion returns to lace. -Thus, -during the few past seasons we have had fringe, ...

THE CHILD AND THE MOURNERS

... i, I j Et . , . ?? .. .1I V.. A little child, beneath a tree, Sat and chanted cheerily A little song, a pleasant song, Which was-she sang it all day long- When the wind b ...

LANCASHIRE LYRICS.—No. V

... * I[Etered a' Stationers' Hall.] I ST Y . - - ?? . Aean - - LNOCASHIRE LYRICS.-No, V. res BY EDwcy D I &`UGH, Eise so. OIHRJUIP. ?? ce. |Os ' CHI;RRIJP. :00 ' the Young Chirrup wur a metled cowt; - engr His heart an' limbs vfir true, open mt Ab foot-race, or at wrostlin'-beaw,- earti Oi- aught he buckled to;- efihe6 ro- At wark or play, xrectgallantly by c red : .MaH laid into his game; arril ...

ART AND LITERARY GOSSIP

... r- ART AND LITERARY.GOSSIP. s , I . . _ . Mr eorgePaft~u, A.B. A., has taken up his residence aogt us for a short period, forthe purpose of y,atte executing a few coummissions. ae r. Lord Ravens worth, following the example of Mr. csrtford Gldtne, is seeki zg to distinguish himself inl classical lite- 2(d im&c velure He has aninounced a new trans~laioni of the Odes. friends of Horace., with ...

EXAMINATIONS OF THE SOCIETY OF ARTS

... EXAMIINATIONS OF TH3E SOCIETY OF ARTS. VI ?? be The result of the examinations by the Society of th Arts has just been made public in the society's at 4 a Journal, and we are glad to notice several yo ...

FASHIONS FOR JUNE

... TASHIONS FOR JU.NE. w, Never since the days when George the Third; i to was King has lace been worn in such profusion as . s- it is 'at the present time. Certainly Ik must beoAd- Id mitted that no ot ...

ART AND LITERARY GOSSIP

... ART jAND L[TERARY Go1;:P. i Are:| nexsio f modern art Mamifctures, either 5j designed or executed, by students of the schools of art, is ad 1opened to the public at the outh Kensington Museusm. -d | -We learn from Parisathat Mr. Mitchell, of the -Royal Library, Bond-street, London hag presented ts the re Th~tre l'raih.ais, in that city, a portrait of Udlle. Rahiel et ?? fashionable French ...

THE SATURDAY EVENING CONCERTS

... North- --AJ used as The entertainment on Saturday evening last was e time furnished by Mr. Coleman, in his admirable doues.ca asong a tions 'of nien and mannecrs, calle ...

MAGAZINES FOR THE MONTH

... MAGAZINES FOR TEE MONTH. fd ?? I VCVCVR. 'PTI~~~i~K 'which it placed, B3Y:T11 53ADLE OF ]iI1Ay. howeveu (Frm'tle ubln' sirrstsi feuc~ie.Jwas adu was par *Oh! if -I had uuone'y galore,-ialstorc,. h ra I'd just build a sweet -cottage,-n morer;; In A deep-vallied-glen, far away from rude men.: * ite But-when will~that tinie bc,-alhi when? colum Position .And, when the sunrise came to open my ...

POETRY

... lirarcents came, as out- .. .- ?? She WlI5per'd-! Cease, but ceseUP5 Of doves. .d weepairg grves WIth theeJ. What. anacan t tdare; Wo TUIE LOVE KNOT. Tying her bonnet under her chin, She tied bar raven ringlets in- But not alone in the silken snare Did she catch her lovely floating hair For thig her bonnet under her chin, She tied a young man's heart within. TheyI were strolling together up ...

ODE TO THE NORTH-EAST WIND

... ODE TO TEHk- A, B I ; Welcome, wild . . 'I I to |.e Wel-come - Sham, tstosee as Odes bo 4very zephyr Ne'er a verse to thee - Welcome, black North'easte I I O'er ibe German foam. ;e ; O'er the Danish loorlanD Lr : - Frourthy frozen home. Tired we are of saxmmer, e Tired of gaudy glare, r Showers soft are streamini a. Hot and breathless air. Tired of listless dreaming Through the lazy day - b, ...