POETRY

... tide. Speak lindly to the outcast! there may be within her yet A retrospect of purer days, which she would fain forget: A truiting laither's last fond look, a dying mother's sighi, III some deep cavern of her hcart, upbraiding, still may lie. Speak kindly ...

Poetry

... thee I'll tell. I'll speak of mountains towvring high, Cloud-capp'd as though they touched the skcy, Where birds of prey are seen to fly, And gain the steep O'er-bangtug rocks,-with ravines nigh, , Both wide and deep. I'll speak of dashing, foaming streams ...

POETRY

... POETRY. SPEAK GENTLY, Speo eontly-it ir bettor far To t,1 by love than fear; Spoak geutly-let no hotsh Word mar The 6o00 Iva might do hore. Speak gently-love doth vwbisper low, The vowa that tri-e hoarts bidd! And gently ?? ncoaonts dow; Affeotion's voieS ...

Poetry

... angry seens, And hoarsely mocks. I'll speak of mines,- boundless store Of peerless, priceless, sparkling ore; And of thy undulating shore I'll often tell, Where strangely mingls ocean's roar With sea-gulls yell, ru speak of forests, where the pins And wids-spread ...

POETRY

... Whose heart may prove true to the end. We none of us know one another, And oft into error we fall; Then let us speak well of our brother, Or speak not about him at all. A smile or a sigh may awaken Suspicion most false and undue: And thus our belief may be ...

Literature

... this work simply to impart to his readers some hints on the art of speaking, but in the course of his periormnance be became Bo imspressedt with the conviction that the power of speaking well wan indissolubly connected with ability to read and write well ...

Literary Notices

... utterance. All men, bellmen and hawkers excepted, speak much more than they spout. Indeethere are numbers-we do not allude to ladies of eburse-wlto tnever speak ia. publir, 'and yet possess a capacity of speaking in private 'whicho is absolutely boundless ...

THE THEATRICAL EXAMINER

... know. If ghosts can speak we don't see why they are all to speak like bassi profonde. We occasionally have read stage directions in plays, laughs like a fiend ; according to present practice there should be a stage direction, speaks like a ghost. Heaven ...

HELP FOR POLAND

... ignored- Words of cheer for Poland. By our liberties endeared, Speak for outraged Poland. Sy John Milton's wvords of flame, And our Hiamliden's patriot name, ,By oppression o'er the same, Speak a word fur Poland. Words of truth are swords of might, Loud ...

NIGHT

... mother's voice commandeth silence. Lest any wake her babe that sweetly sleepath, So God speaks silence, and the world is quiet, For so He giveth his beloved sleep, We speak of life as day, of death as night But night and day alce both divinely given What ...

PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS

... . To suffer the burlesque of Attine, written by Mr. Henry Bellingham and Mr. William Best, to speak for itself would be unkind. The fact is, it cannot speak. It is not intelligent. Excepting the well- known story of Tyhe Bohenian Girl, nobody knew what ...

Poetry

... matter I NoW I trust. Iind eyes, unto your tale hall-told, Ye speak because ye must I Too oft will heavy laws constrain The lips, compelled to bear A message false; too often fain To speak but what they dare; Full oft will words, will smiles betray, But ...