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TiNTERN ABBEY

... leave thee beauteous ruin with a sigh, While placid moonlight o'er thee gently smiles I love to look upon that starry sky. Whose night-tears weep along thine hallowed aisles- Wh ere solitude our sorrow oft beguiles, Or makes calm sorrow dearer while we ...

Published: Saturday 26 September 1835
Newspaper: Monmouthshire Merlin
County: Monmouthshire, Wales
Type: Article | Words: 526 | Page: 4 | Tags: News 

THE BROKEN HEART

... ler , v. have lost their star-light brightness ; for throughout many long and weary night have they aglv watched the feverish agony of the dying sulterer. 1.7,1. night have the unclouded stars of heaven, their w radiance, shone upon the dying room; and ...

Published: Saturday 29 June 1844
Newspaper: Monmouthshire Beacon
County: Monmouthshire, Wales
Type: Article | Words: 5020 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

ist the bill

... Polish peasants themselves war with the Polish gentry. hear of bands of scytheraen scouring the country, and a sky reddened, night after night, iaceudiary fires. The Gallician peasant*, says a German paper, have sent ask the Emperor whether he would not ...

Published: Saturday 15 April 1848
Newspaper: Monmouthshire Beacon
County: Monmouthshire, Wales
Type: Article | Words: 4624 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

STARLIGHT FANCIES. Ye fair and lovely stars, That gem the dark blue sky of night, And shed your soft and

... STARLIGHT FANCIES. Ye fair and lovely stars, That gem the dark blue sky of night, And shed your soft and zenith light Above earth's petty jars, Hundreds of years have pass ii away, And still ye beam in beauty there, Makingnight dearer far than day, Ye ...

Published: Wednesday 06 June 1849
Newspaper: Swansea and Glamorgan Herald
County: Glamorgan, Wales
Type: Advertisement | Words: 301 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

A CHILD'S DREAM OF A STAR

... at hide and seek in the sky all night, must surely be the children of the stars; and they would all be grieved to see their playmates, tbe children of men, no more. There was one clear shining star that ueed to come out in the sky before the rest, near ...

Published: Saturday 13 April 1850
Newspaper: Monmouthshire Merlin
County: Monmouthshire, Wales
Type: Article | Words: 1293 | Page: 4 | Tags: News 

JAMES HORNER, BOOT MAKER, 194, COMMERCIAL STREET, NEWPORT. LETTERS FROM AUSTRALIA

... the world. The moony is in a fearful Mate , for want of protection, and robberim and marten committed with impunity. I sky', every night with it pair pistols under tiny pillow, my father's hig sword hung up by the bent-head, and also an American bowie-knife ...

Published: Friday 28 January 1853
Newspaper: Star of Gwent
County: Monmouthshire, Wales
Type: Article | Words: 1210 | Page: 1 | Tags: none

MAWLOP.RI/D

... order our dog Cart at four p.m. The sky is lowering and threatening. When lilt much otherwise at Swansea? suggests or fdend, apot.geticsliy. But a hit evening is hoped for—nay, it is promised In thst bit of blue sky wilkh we notice seaward ; and there ...

Published: Saturday 04 June 1859
Newspaper: Star of Gwent
County: Monmouthshire, Wales
Type: Article | Words: 3817 | Page: 9 | Tags: none

A TALE OF THE FRENCH COURT

... many and may the a/ from dinners and the cham /Way which she bad retaken those four square was, _whisk new shone ant so sky. The night me hot a breath wen • rthring—list it had brought mod counsel notwitbmtanding ; end just an the abeam had arrived at the ...

Published: Saturday 21 June 1862
Newspaper: Newport Gazette
County: Monmouthshire, Wales
Type: Article | Words: 1589 | Page: 6 | Tags: none

THE PRINCE, THE LADY, AND THEI JOCKEY

... the cham- pagnegouters which she had partaken within those four square walls, which now shone out so sharp against the sky. The night was hot and sultry-not a breath was stirring—but it had brought good counsel notwith- standing and just as the fair schemer ...

Published: Saturday 21 June 1862
Newspaper: Pontypool Free Press
County: Monmouthshire, Wales
Type: Article | Words: 1796 | Page: 4 | Tags: News 

A FRENCH VIEW OF THE DERBY

... come to its aid, and decidedly the papular taete is not for it. At eleven o’clock night the visitors to the throng to Cremorne, where it is the custom spend a part of the night after the races at Epeom. Cremome something like a masked ball without masks. ...

Published: Saturday 21 June 1862
Newspaper: Chepstow Weekly Advertiser
County: Monmouthshire, Wales
Type: Article | Words: 2819 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

20. The whale gets so proud in consequence of a visit from the Prince and Princess of Wales, that he

... voices in the night, delightful perfume from the river Thames, and influx of humming bird.. Earthquakes every five-and-twenty minutes, and a huge chasm opens at Charing-cross, out of which come strange musical sounds. The sky at night is a MU/ of variegated ...

Published: Wednesday 31 December 1862
Newspaper: Swansea and Glamorgan Herald
County: Glamorgan, Wales
Type: Illustrated | Words: 1712 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

INIMI LLANGENNECH

... is deepened with Just, raised by the countless crowd, and the sniitke of numerable lamps. Over all is the high, clear, sky of night, with the deoreseent moon shining an the surface of the ver.—Atheneton. A vdieemen of Leeds, named Linfont, is in custody ...

Published: Wednesday 13 January 1864
Newspaper: Swansea and Glamorgan Herald
County: Glamorgan, Wales
Type: Article | Words: 1699 | Page: 6 | Tags: none