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NATURE AND CRIME

... NATURE AND CRIME. EIRioM TAIT'S NdACAZtLYE Wrt a forest oldi and deep I ?? i~s har iseve was wild. Yor midgist not deemn that,xslsenl achild. Qi hat eyeha gtow-d with feelingsmild: tsokerr git'ssios onr desperate leap O~rgitsdark, stern. cloudcorertd ...

Poetry

... upon his brow, He saw the Yearful deed, and will, in time, Reveal, by Hlis own means, the guilty one. Yes, even now the dread crime is avenged: Think ye the traitorous ?? could dare To rob that gentle boy of his young life Shall ever on this earth know rest ...

THE PARIS MYSTERY

... that every traco of their crime wee for aver effaced. It is to be added that Ml, Feneyron, the principal maurderer, wasiormerly in busineseas a draggist, and his victim, M, Aubert, served his apprenticeship to bim, No crime since the Tropmann murders ...

EXETER LITERARY SOCIETY

... right system, said, if habits of indolence lead to crime, let it be the province of the law to enforce habits of industry. He would again remark, there are many crimes not sins aud many sins not crimes. Prison discipline, then, must be a system which promotes ...

Literature

... among the advocates for universal total abstinence, we cannot doubt that drunkenness is the fruitful parent of Innumerable crimes, and to this great fact no sound moralist can close his eyes whilst pursuing an investigation like that of Mr. Worsley. We ...

POETRY

... young Coxcomb, nor formal old Prig; I can laugh at a Jest, if not told out of Time, And excluse a Mistake, but not flatter a Crime. Unbias'd I view things around as they pass, Nor squint at the Great through a blackening glass; The Faults of my Friends, ...

Poets' Corner

... unpurged crime, Arise then ! smite at once, in vengeful mood, Your nests of civil foes, Those Vampyres fatt'ning on their country's woef, Who, fearinj light, may stop their feasts of blood, Ply eagerly, by turns, each impious spell, 'Ihat Crime and Ignorance ...

THEATRE ROYAL

... DUD UAR'S GOLD1 A drama of absorbing interest, and full of sensational incident, in A Dead Man's Gold; or, The Hibtory of a Crime, which was y)roduoed last evening at the Theatre Royal, by Mr WV. H. Sharpo's well- known company, erd the wonder is that ...

SIR ARTHUR SULLIVAN'S NEW OPERA

... of a curse which compels him to commit a crime every day or-to die.. Now, Gros smith, themild baronet, refuses the title ander sunb conditions and hides himself, leaving Barrington to commit tie obligatory crimes, lie is however, compelled to take his place ...

Poetry

... vaults a melancholy bower For spirits of the dead at night's enchanted hour. They dread to meet thee, poor unfortunate I Whose crime it was, on Life's unfiniehed road, To feel the step.dame bufletings of fate, And render back thy being's heavy load. Ati I ...

THE NEW OPERA

... do one crime or more Once every day f or ever I This doom he can't defy, However he may txry; - For, should hae stay His hand that day, In torture he shall die, The prophecy came true: Each heir who held the title, Had every day to do Some crime of import ...

Literature

... every social question. Crime is, in great measure, the result of a diseased social syten, and whateverincreases the disease increases crime. -ill ga.-eAn- ment construct an elaborate and expensive machinqry for the punishment of crime and the reformation ...