VENTNOR AND BONCHURCH LITERARY AND SCIENTIFIC INSTITUTE
... playfully enlivened by wit, as retined as it was keen; aud at another, • race fully embellished with the imagery and eloquence ...
... playfully enlivened by wit, as retined as it was keen; aud at another, • race fully embellished with the imagery and eloquence ...
... we do, that Lady klin's resources arc very limited amount. • or Burns.—The Rev. T. W. •■' l h, will deliver a lecture the poetry of :l Wednesday evening next, at the Masonic >11. Street. From that gentleman's high.lv ' qualities, doubtless a great tri ...
... that, by the Ancient grammarians, rhetoricians, and oratars, Rhythm was held to bear the same relation to Oratory Metre to Poetry, and further demonstrated from Quintilian that the old rhetoricians had mechanical method of regulating the length of the ...
... phrases of official egotism. intense vulgarity often lurks under the exaggerations of romance, so also real grandeur and even poetry retire under the useful and plain. It is easier to conceive that the great Free Trade Minister otten suppressed a higher meaning ...
... use books that are taken by them from the Manchester I'ree Lending Library th proportions following literature (including poetry and fiction, essays, literary history, and eneyclopoedias) each volume read, an average, fifteen times a-year. Works upon ...
... neglect the economy of the kitchen. They will thoroughly understand the dignity of the employment, and call to mind all the poetry of cooking. To say nothing of the dinner which Milton describes Eve as preparing, when on hospitable thoughts intent, there ...
... interesting lecture was delivered oil Tuesday evening last, by Mr. William Weeks, one of tbe members, o£ the Usefulness of Poetry. A lecture will be delivered on London Lodgings, by Mr. Copping, at the Queen'! Rooms, on Wednesday next, connexion with ...
... Delamere, Nov., 1854. Riv. J. Smith The Irish Exodus. —Mr. Carleton, the celebrated Irish writer of fiction, announces (in smooth poetry) through the columns of the Nation, that he is about to leave Ireland for ever, and to close the remainder of his days in ...
... country for which to bleed, or a dialect of their own which to express their national life. \ The transition was made from poetry to music, and it was shewn that Mozart, who was the son of the subchapel-master of Salzburg, was the greatest musical composer ...
... listen to music and poetry, though these indeed would quite enough, the variety of .Mr. Field's programmes possess compi sitions of the highest order; but, in addition to these, get the remarks, which introduce these gems of poetry and music, the best ...
... absence of Mr. Ilobson, the garrison chaplain, who did not return until rather a late hour. The evening passed in singing poetry and harmless amusements until half-past o'clock, when all separated much delighted with the entertainment, each 'tie one ...
... are at tuned to the deaf in ear and the hard is heart, that they may touch and make vibrate the chords of the inmost soul. Poetry is ever tuning her lyre, and singing of that beautir .1 state to which the human race is capable of rising. hope is mi. pointing ...