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Ireland

Place

Belfast, Antrim, Northern Ireland

Access Type

3,377

Type

3,377

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RECORDS OF WOMAN, WITH OTHER POEMS

... RECORDS OF WOMAN, WITIf OTIIER PCEMS. BY FELICIA RHEiANS. Mrs. Hemans has Xcently published a volume of delightful poetry,, _es4gltd to illustrate, what none but a female writer caQ truly illustrate, the sympathies and the sensibilities of fe female heatt ...

LITERARY NOTICE

... genius. His episorle on Lord Byion is, ia loftiness and spirit, equal to any thing of its kind in tire whole range of' modern poetry. The articles entitled Jomurnals and Reviews, Writers on Church Reform, Anecdotes of Napo- leon, Transportation ...

POETRY

... I * I POETRY. .A - - ! .. .. I .1 ,1 _. - . - A romantic drama entitled Thierna na Oge, or the Land of Youth, .has been produced at Drury Lane, with- unbounded applause. ?? of its principal charac- ters is O'Donoghue, the enchanted Prince of the ...

LITERARY NOTICE

... some.effect. e. cannot particularize further than merely observing that the present number is intersp etsed.with original poetry.-' It it chiefly of. a poltical.character, and, in many in- stances, the sarcastic strokes which have been inflicted have ...

SELECT POETRY

... : S1L1CT POETRY; * , _ i .. I: I I I MQRTALITY. o WHy should the'seimit of mortal be proud I Like a fast flitting meteor, a fast flying cloud, A flash of the lightning, a break of tie wave, He t a giferoahi He passes from fe to'his rest i te grave. The ...

LITERATURE

... to give us obcaionally a treat of these, and they willtellin mode directions than on ?? With regard, however, to-general 'poetry, descriptive or seihti- mental, the poetical contributions of the:&fonthiy by no nieans coine up -to our taste. Any na of ...

THE MONTHLY MAGAZINE

... diflaji- potntment, the-fallen leaf, the faded it16,1'#ie'bi i W kebbit, 'th~edsl gr1l-ave,. ?? mna eiaj~me'dica'of her remedial poetry. ToMMisaL. $. L's or ra'ther iorace's theory, we bow-we do not'qetestion the-existenreeof prevalent evil'n the 'world-Utft'iwih ...

LITERATURE

... Byron,- and 'thii earier' ifFusionls''6 Carmpbell. After., the ephuisreral clas of~uovelty shall bay let its attraction, the poetry of Scott will hold a mid- dbe rank between ~the opr ilngiameldiocrity .of moat of our nodan Annualists, and the sustained ...

POETICAL OLD BACHELORS

... lonely honours withl more dignity thaei grace ; for instance, Cornei'lle, IRacine. Boileau, the classic 1i names of French poetry; were all poetical old bachelors.. Racinre, le tendre Raozile,' as he' is called, par exce lence, is said never to have beell ...

LITERARY NOTICE

... fastidiously formed for ourselves. We are, however, sensible of the impossibility of meeting individual wishes in this respect-poetry in 'its highest character is a flower, which as Dr. Currie, we think, observes, springs up but once in-s century, and cir ...

MR. KNOWLES'S LECTURES ON THE ANCIENT DRAMA

... Schlegel's name is an autho- rity in all that pertains to tbe.stage. Still, however, even he rests his claims rather on his poetry than his knowledge of dramatic tact, and his assertion, too, is weakened, in some degree, by'bis venturing to'place Euripidies ...

LITERATURE

... with all the freshness of our earliest feelings, it is wed. ded to our language, and is incorporated with our literature, our poetry, and our science. After the last of the 'Cesars, to use Hallam's expression, had folded round him the impe- rial mantle ...