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Literary Notices

... ttett, anod have yotr htair cttt I once aI year, and never hove your clotties truslted, g antd snap every hotly tipl btit speaks to you, attd tella tliot to order tlteir coffins ; they iso uld he sure tn die h of fear if you frightented themn tell , a ...

Literary Notices

... ihe fray; i re 'TIhe conflict fur Ireedom is gathering nigh;- X ei5 We live to secure it, or -lut0iously die ! ieat - fin speaking of ' insults added tn injuries,' I refer r bytol the tnratment tbe Chartists endure while in custodY a J for political oflfnces ...

Poetry

... vviiidtih it pridlme is llnO- Ur Itilir UdvtniJtiwe ol p1l l1'lualiiy. Ad isordlerly man iv is ilivave Ii it lurry ; iL I aciniot speak to you be- a 1 *liltits he n!is going elsevlivre, ind vlie he gets of ?? he is toll bite for lis business, or lie tmust d, ...

Literary Notices

... this cornucolpia springs upwarts a jet of water, descending in a one-sided shower to its parent pool, atid though I cannot speak in high terms either oftile beauty of the long Cupid, or ite jet dean, 1 must confess the sound of tbe dropping water is pleasanit ...

Poetry

... the sky, W v h bylil'd the So viour's birth Arv ye not sinlginig still on high- Ye thet sialig e'euce ol eoarth 1' To us yet speak the strains, i\V huotsr itI in ttiles gotte by, Ye bless'd the Syrinn stwaie s- () voices of the sky! t ?? end shilling Light ...

Literary Notices

... on all ?? ol' glory and renown, and our-jealousy ca'- ti- eriis eren to the re to it utrfoi t1 ir 1emalts anid diogs. ?? Speaking of the late CLinadhian ?? mili ia ?? Detroit were ordered out ; they could not refuse to ie obey the summons, as they ivere ...

Literary Notices

... politie, anti vety htandsomo. His eyes are an- Ittd cototonly isielligeot, and so bright, I cannot loak at tog iterni woltn lite speaks to mes, for titey acm or s00c Ire. through mine itito mny itnort, and read ail lthat is titote. Irs. 'There isn ctlticg thore ...

Poetry

... of t cross, on St. Patrick's-day, in memory of tliat great saint. Spenser, in his View of the State of Ireland, 1596, speaking of these late warres of Mounster, which was before n a most rich and plentiful country, full of corn and cattle, says ...

Literary Notices

... evil surmises, be it uinteistood, for 9i 'Sa long, time circuilatedl only amotigat tlie latent, or, lit ate more properly speaking, ftsl Itunbler class, Ion ctie fr di- peer are hot necessarily low ; but sotnelios, by degrees, hic of they crept nit antI ...

Literary Notices

... == --r - -a- ?? - utlitfrare -L-Tticro 1111E DANDY )1.D) BACHELOR, I0 MRS S. c. It ll.. Old Bachldors,generally speaking. are a wilful, cranky, odd.tempered, oild-looking, ill-mannered race of abomiatiotns; they ate, as a bully, recognizable by many ...

Literary Notices

... not 'up to the knees' I I would walk ' filty miles on foot' lo see that man wvhao never caricatures the subject on which lie speaks; but where is such a otie to be found I From ' rosy moer to dewy eve,' in our common con- versation, we are constantly outraging ...

Poetry

... Cheese ' Much philologival research has been brought to the explanlaion of this passage. In lthe preceding aerse Job is speaking of his death. Wilt tltou britg me unto dust again 1 lut what has the ponrinti out of milk to do wvith death ? The peo- ...