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Hampshire, England

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LITERARY MISCELLANEA

... inoflesii for all revelries, and lbe made answver and sid Itilsekte s( truth, if the Sabilb will not be (lisple da t Wlft pr-ay speaks. I am certain that yon wiliohiligy i offend us. Does the Sahib L see tlos utnes 'hy are playing very pleasantly. lint the ...

LITERARY MISCELLANEA

... LITTLE MAN. There are some of my neighbours wvo say of my song, Old Tauras is surely a little too strong: They ask why I speak of so strauge a design In a pleasant and peaceable neighbour of mine ? And they think that the plan Of the sly little man ...

LITERARY MISCELLANEA

... sincere Nvish of your entirely devoted v Albert.' Upoii this Humboldt remarks to Varnhangen a that the Prince 'maktues me speak of' circling seas of v light and star-terraves,-a Cobourg variation on my te~xt and qaite Evglish. from Windsor, where there ...

GOSPORET

... the Great 1 Exhibition in Hyde Peark in 1851.' Of the merits of I Cunningham's Beefing Topsails itwudb2uefuu for us here to speak, beyond the fact that there are two masts with yards, explanatory of' the old principle and his own, rigg edeon the centre ...

LITERARY NOTICES

... aod manyv themn extere'pse A romnant of such a practice, we ame told,. yet lingers languidly in Ireland. lint, generally speaking, we aises love according to formula and marry in peace. Marriages are somctimes arranged,' as the newspapers say. We I- ...

LITERARY NOTICES

... all owe to ths scan who gave iotetemeeinc It is sober trails tbat the inscnptioii in West- usisister Abbey) tells, whesn it speaks of lust aso inmorn the- ' beet beiicfaetors'osfthe moo,. Yot whot an unsound Organisations tlia great iant hadil Mentally ...

LITERARY NOTICE

... correspondence lies in !itsI ~f frankness and its variety, and in the tone of good brfcd. .e ing u'hich teac~heshim 'lowv tc speak of himself sapithl the. I] .c reserve of a dignifiqcl man, an.]. yet to open his heart with I1 s.the confidence' hiv~ih ' an ...

ESSAYS AND REVIEWS

... wo opotuit o eenig hmele.Some of them, no that dob, ~dcoet teknwelg ht their arguments by1l weesphsial n ta hernw ihso to speak, was , I rheao ensnthnmve htthe Upper House the, should be informed of the presenainof the report, aic-, a inu companied by ...

WEST SUSSEX AND CHICHESTER CATTLE SHOW CLUB

... that of lie people, so nearly connected with us, who wvere carryimi lhis ust on that fratricidal wasi. He souldchdnot be speaking his theT er feelings if he did not ask what sad .Imnerica's conduct been tlsI re for some time past towtsrals thus country ...

FASHIONS

... alre iiet qunite so Outraigeous, it is still tile fashion, aind likely to iI 11001 so ? Simply lbscallse-if, atleast ,we speak Of' ei'iiO' NN lill pcr~C', 111( Ilot of tule ciiga iid beep1 abominations- ti iisraly becoiming. Th'le ncillle forml is muvch ...

THE OPENING OF THE INTERNATIONAL EXHIBITION

... but, except in the passsges north and sout4 of the nave, there was little difficulty in maoving about. It is iinpossihls to speak too highly of the manner in wbich the arrangements w ere oliserveul by all concerned. If thme comiplete succeess of' the opening ...

LITERARY NOTICES

... at all time~s, the 'T'ruo and tile Beautifuil ti only exce~tionally anti by special grace; and it is of' the f ood, or to speak uore plainlyl, of ' woman's phmtila- a tliropmy generally, that she writes in this essay. A. K. 11. 13. contributes a article ...