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Examiner, The

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The Examiner

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... they did not stop until they came to some rocks, where they made a stout re- sistance. Freydis came out mud saw that 1(arlsethe's people fell hack, snsd she cried out, ' Why do ye run, stout men as ye are, before these miserable wretches, whom I thonght ye ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... now-neat, white, and low, The modest Palace looks like Brunswick Row; There, echoed once the merriest orgies known, Since the frank Norman won grave Harold's throne; There, bloom'd the mulberry groves, beneath whose shade His easy loves the royal Rowley made; ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... patient brain; the free lance of mo- dern times,-when the pen supplies the place ofthe sword, and the ready wit succeeds to the stout arm. And now, at the age of twenty, he added to his cares and responsibili- ties, by a marriage of love. lie was, successively ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... LITERARY EXAMINER. Sir Francis COhantrey, R.A. Recollections of his Life, Practice, and Opinions. By George Jones, B.A. Edward Moxon. No one, after reading this volume, will presume to ques- tion the variety or profundity of its author's classical erudition ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... THE LITERARY EXAMINER. Enoch Ai-den, etc. By Alfred Tennyson, D.C.L, Poet- Laureate. Moxon. When Dante taught men how a poet should write in his mother toiguc, he expressed the simple truth of his soul through the artificial learning of his time, by saving ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... his back, and got him to sing one of the Capern compositions, which he did without removing the coals from his necki while stout Mr Capernj says the narrator, tripped the light fantastic toe most hilatiously across the lane from hedge to hedge, his ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... broken rat ti daor the poem which contains the words above quoted continues sad Co. y to bring credit and profit to its ?? Moxon a conscience of invincible immortality in the memories and the mouths - of men. it What is there now of horrible in this ? ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... thinking, as it were, in broad day. The student could see every turn and winding of it; and the frankness of his manner gave a singular attraction to the frank boldness of his intellect, and more than anything, perhaps, explained the mingled love and admiration ...