Refine Search

LITERATURE

... I- and is oboreocer sro:lt by the introduction of Stenaia 0 macbuer gain.ft wa a piyhe meddled with such sub- g.jects as Halloween, Cttd the CottarsStidyNgt hs *r have been alread sugb one, whose yewl win i. other lord. T ~After aHl, these are but trifl's ...

POETRY

... Where at dim ligrht is faintly beaniss On a silent and shladowvless band. I can ne'er forget that glonmin, When I tried the Hallowe'en spel- When I heard that fearful omen The toll of a funeral bell. I have felt life's joys ere over With me since tlat fatal ...

ORIGINAL JOTTINGS

... M&aise's a picture, 534, 4 Snap-Apple Night, is an admirable scene -om rustic life in Ireland. It is hill of fun and Hallowe'en s-ilic, and though it is hung in an unfavourable place, and looks pull and obscure, nevertheless is a good, true, and character ...

LITERATURE

... of havingbeen onIfa s rosso eelels n;-leo hail gone to the Mar~et andl XFs rssso ber. dlei at midnight of the previous Halloween CARl Saints' Eve), Nl under rite guiding and conduct of the devil . . . playing it befreyo o hs id f nsruens. Thea compn ...

Literature

... heart, never barbouring spite! 0 falchion satire, flashing keen I How welcome was your genial light Beside the hearth at Hallowe'en, When Fancy sheathed the dangerous blade, And but its lewetted hilt displayed! Perchance his Not of humans shame ,Showed ...

JUVENILE MUSICAL FESTIVAL

... trees. I smited at the r a idea, and toid my friend that it would L4 a long time before tl. be could fuenish apesleefora Hallowe'en prtLy. I planted1n0 ?? fruit treeia. Well, last seasbon Ivisited my friend. Healed aly wue into his garden, and there it ...

NEW READINGS OF AN OLD POET

... water of F ]el, much freq ented by pike, the Scotch name of which is esd. Mennce the name of John o' Ged's bole. The poem on Halloween so abounds in antique West countryr phrases that it alone would occupy the .space allottedl for ano article to .form. a complete ...

LITERATURE

... 8 the, biting dr reot ?? o; Nightin- i, gale, with awl ugra her heart, t and the Ittemuho e aesilwr upon her breast; the Halloween rm ofl of quiet po etry, and beauty, and coln wfue fe-up the breezy wood; wee Nri apel dying of s tarvation, with the sogfthlas ...

THEATRE-ROYAL PANTOMIME

... that sweet believer in things immaterial to the ti ; grosser sense happened to have been born under w ,the witching Star of Hallowe'en; and everybody O ,knows, or ought to kn~ow, that if there be one h unaceptical Star in the wide Heaven of Romance, ox I ...

LITERATURE

... Mackenzie, Lon- ioo don, Glasgow, and Edinburgh. ,es, Amongst the contents of the second part of the the National Burns are Hallowe'en, The Cottar's is Saturday Night, The Jolly Beggar4 and The her Twa Dogs -all appropriately illustrated, whilst the ...

THE COURT

... THE COURT. Balmoral, November; The Queen drove out yesterday with Princess Beatrice. In the Hallowe'en was celebrated by the servants and tenants, who carried torches ia procession from the West Lodge to the front of the Castle, where a bonfire was lit ...