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Glasgow Herald

THE SCOTCH NOVELS

... Qtir tlste, ?? lldicrous.4 Aunot Lvle, aid, 0Ch!lildrenl of t)i3e list, aie in a verv ?? iiiarner-aud are full of genitis and poetry. 'T lle ieii1e 501es at Argyle's tstle, and in tle escape from it-though trespassing too falr beyond the ounds ?? probability-u:' ...

ORIGINAL POETRY

... ORIGINAL POETRY. ?? IIFA.AITOR-1 0Iopes. how Yowl isert the foller- ing:- Iwio TciLY.. vat tho' the wind biows in m faice Vile here that ve is StOpingj I gailv splices the n:in brhiwe n ndsighslfor Poll otfVoppiig. Avay, with carc.-V, 'tis a sin Our peepers ...

SERENADE

... . The II b[ooks wvcre in geueril -of a cismion elass. There sit were, however,- three rare articles, in Old English lot . Poetry, antd these called forth all the spirit anti enl- so --thusiasni of the collectors. Ti ,Vy'r Degore, a Poeticalli omtivnce ...

RADICAL POETRY

... RADICAL POETRY. SINE DONXEY- AND USS PAN1qNIEtS fl A Fable.-By, TVoimas. 34owe, ,Esq. Ig r- G 'essus jam sudat assellus, g ~ Parce ilfi; vestrum delicuim est 'ainus- nm Virgil. Copa. is A Do;nkey, whose talent for burdens as wonderous, as So iaqch ...

[ill] AUTHOR OF THE PLEASURES OF HOPE, &c

... martial. sort clii alro Irs haiflis OF 01 CCCt land were eagzerly collected sold imitated . At that stirrticg time, the po~etry of Cavmpbell came forth. lilie acairn and stea~v leigt tO a lurird. and troubl,,d atmephvlire. lie hod, par taken of ?? pec ...

THE HOUSES OF PARLIAMENT AND THE FINE ARTS

... painting or sculprture wvliclr are of oniiiersal or oh nriatioaal interest. Ti'sei r sources ace retaliia, pacritro, arl l poetry. Their piurpose is to edify, by the highest esamllssi tin htnngrr~ctSoictionio! s ; to Fciroitik c thre lovse nf it ?? 00 ...

EDINBURGH ASSOCIATION FOR THE PROMOTION OF THE FINE ARTS

... a first-rase en- graving, a series of etched outlitnes iliustrastive of selle puottico n .f the History or of the National Poetry of scointland as thev are led to believe that such a serties ,f Etichittie. couldlie I I obtiined at a moderate expjentli ...

ENGLAND

... a marriage -was contracted. The de- at: of fendanet's letters were written in th e most impassioned to strains, though his poetry was of the vilest. This style of N corresponlence corntinued ?? to July, 1844, when it ceased, 51 and in September followving ...

POETRY OF RAILWAY TRAVELLING

... lok; about him until the next train arrives; I and as to all the poetry of travelling being lost, I am quite of the contrary opinion. It is in the narrow, close-poclked diligences that poetry vanishes : ve become dull, we are plawued with heat and dust in ...

LITERATURE

... compositions, besidesbeing lone of thesimplest, areby no means the most pleasing. The third, music and poetry by Mr. Morton, is a song, the poetry of which is like tha of either of good or bad in them; Caldwell's Journal 'promises to be no-common book ...

HOW I STOOD FOR THE DREEPDAILY [ill]

... But this time I Jo was on my guard, and held out with heroic stubbornness. I did not even launch out upon the subject of poetry, which Maggie rather cleverly introduced; for there is a decided affinity between an the gay science and the tender passion ...