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Bangor, Caernarfonshire, Wales

Access Type

945

Type

945

Public Tags

Poetry

... uight, fler breaihing soft and li1v. As in her breest the wave of life Kept heavieig to and fron So silently weseemed to speak- YL) 'lo lvl Iw~vedl abolutI Ak iie halid l elit ier half 11 r IiWlSer TI)o eke her living out! i' Our veer hopes lied our ...

Poetry

... parent bowed in hopeless dead Kissedl the cold tear drop frowu his pallid cbeek, And l4eik'd to henven the prayer she coubl Dot Speak. O withr:whhat deep andl speechless agany, She snatched the parting groan, the ieeble sigh M1y God! she criedl, t) spare ? ...

Our Library Table

... voice, the least pos- sible addition of soleuinity, is all that the average reader oug(lht to venture on. If more is done- we speak of average men-it becomes a dictation ou the part of the readler to the congregation of what tirey ought to be feeling and ...

A FEW PLAIN HINTS AND SUGGESTIONS ON TEACHING THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE IN (WELSH) COUNTRY SCHOOLS

... As long as thev g- encouragement to speak it is confined (as is isow the case ij 11e iss many places) withisn the walls of the schoolsoem; t where except on extraordinary occasions, it is an offence j~ g) to speak at all; and where no portion of time ...

POETRY

... heard long, long ago, In childhood's radiant spitere,- Soft with ffleotlon's tender woe, These evening sonieds appear. Oh ! speak unto my list'ning soul, Ye aergelis fom above, Let in tmy brenst somne accents fall Of pity and of love ! Hath! over hill ...

FASHIONS FOR MAY

... the benefit of our usual tour of inspection, The pardessus occupies considerable attention at the present moment. We must speak of several, the pro. ductions of one of our first houses, varying from the most sumptuous, trimmed with many yards of handsome ...

Literary Varieties

... obtain her autograpis, is one of the things that may be classed among the surious difficulties- of a life. SPEAK GENTLY TO THE ERRINiG! Speak gently to the erring- Ye know not all the power With which the dark temptation came In some unguarded hour: ...

Poetry

... Which timid love pours on her sleeping loved. Thy thrilling hush speaks calm-calmer not of death, The breathlessness of veriest life, when moved By the still fervour of a bliss intense, It speaks not-stirs not, charmed, so rapt the passionate Above - that ...

Poetry

... frotibclv his lumuperv Iln the blr ii A jllierl? :a\ we vdl nut save lint ilhl his ejes arn vraxilig ditii, Acil till' his tee speak ill ot ihitl, lie wvas a friend ti Me. (lid Vevir, Vonl shall not dlie. We tilidl so t Ia ll aindl cry wvititoic, I've hall ...

ADVICE TO FRANCE REGARDING HER NASTY-MINDED PAPERS

... t f:- . But we've made' that .cmizia7_ .proupen'o;e, whuil: you were looking on; 'Tie a ?? codld you haveon.a it ' better! Speak fair, -iht Wir, land of the Paladin kings, Chivalrous 'Frenuchien blua ' for the amircling of W Frenc an's I ste;' W~e won't ...

ABERFFRAW

... Mr R. Parry; extempore speaking, prize divided between R. Parry and Thomas Evans; song, Home Sweet. Home, Mrs Eughes, Temperance; song, Pull for the Northern Shore (encored), Mr J. R- Williams, Tyddynhwrad; extempore speaking; duet, Albion on thy ...

Literary Extracts

... down upon Carntrvon? Perhaps it is. of no great importance whether we know when we are or are not speaking British, so that we are intelligible when we do speak. There was a time, how- ever, when an enthusiastic Welsh lexicographer Dr. John Davies, compiled ...