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THE SPY SYSTEM—THE THREE GRAVES

... THE SPY SYSTEM-THE THREE GRAVES. BtY CHARLES LAMtB. CLosE by those ever-burning brimstone beds, Where Bedloe, Oates, and .uuas hide their heads, I saw Great Satan, like a sexton, stand, With his intolerable spade int hand, Digging three graves. Of co ...

THEATRE ROYAL

... romantic interest I about the play, Captain Roland Vereker, of the 24th, being estranged from his wife by the villainy of a Boer spy. The fortunes , of these two form the groundwork of the plot, and the martial setting enables a number of exciting scenes to ...

Poetry

... the hill; Anld every trihkihng rll In golden threads letps down from yonder height. O fly, lladonua I fly; Lest day nud envy spy TWhat only ove and night may safely know Fly and tread softly, dear ! Lest those who hate us hear The sounds of thy light footsteps ...

PRINCE'S THEATRE

... Paved the life of his boeom friend Raymond do Noirville, and he believes bes caused the death of the assailanb Luverean, a spy, who is so like to Laroque as his shadow. The merchant is in fiuancial difficulties, owing.to a heavy- mortgage having been ...

POETRY

... grew One littteb ieeson, lowly and true; And, Love the gardener, wet it apart Cherished It, %6de4 it, ?? Hsaxt. Love ?? i spY over h1elavr: Faahloned & tark'nd in~arotable bower- Love twined the leaves of it; calling tbem ' TeeFM Springing teem Hope ...

POETRY

... holy transport gives, Though frseo oy sttrickon Ieart rumst RoW A tido of grief While9 1`1101Ory livQ3, And glootu sturround spy path below. Could we but raeestro by tile past The volts. of the prasoent hour, Aud cherish joys too bright to lr st. As tho ...

AN AMERICAN STORY OF REAL LIFE

... her, for lie had stolen inter the house, and she had told him some of the best fightint' stoiies he ever heard. She was a spy, and had been in lots of sears. Acting upon the- hint, the es(?s Ye*A Times man knocked at the door this morning (December ...

Poetry

... Wye, whose tide reflected heaven, Reflected beauty too. I see no unknown features, cried Each disappointed fair, My own I spy, and oft have spied, Bat no one else is there. Whenever, replied the crafty crone, ' Ye bless three happy men, The features ...

POETRY

... Scionce asserts it, and science -nust know. And, therefore, forsake we the Rnler whose eye The seerotost action or purpose oan spy, And worship the Atom, who cares not a jot What virtues we praotiso or wickedness plot. We may trample the deoalogne under our ...

Poetry

... ait tho rest. ¶T7E DAYBREAKE AT SEA.-BY JOANNA BAILAL. ViiE Lin distaut billows meet the sky, A pale dill lig-ht the seamen spy, As sneiit they ?? end tempest-tost, 't1 i;s vescl struck, their rudder lost; Wimile distant homes wbere kinsmen weep, A-d grives ...

A BIBLE TO EXETER

... ambition, Poor wvidow's perdition- And Saint Mark was dismise'd in a minute. Of the beam in our eye. Speaks St. Luke, while we spy The mote in the eye of our brothers; And the Savious,'s own prayer Teaches charity there; So they turn'd off Saint Luke with ...

THEATRE ROYAL

... leading part in the last pantomime at the Prince's, is the villain of the play, one Gilbert Westwood, a mnesnmerist and Russian spy and his impersonation of the character was a skilfui and effective performance. Miss Nellie Lawrence's assumption of May Verner ...