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Poetry, Original and Selected

... joys above What wiere angels 11po11 cartI', c Il without v olnal's love - U Sweet wvolliall's love. s TllE 1POWER OF WOMAN. r Ohs, wom'an! anl'O' with love's resistlcss pow'r, Ir 1Pow oft loes terror flash from thy full eye, A nfl thllunder hatig u11on ...

Literature

... 31)) mnen at arms, Mas appoisted to protect the vessels where the woman were aboard, iihonl the y, Kimng is said to have - comforted all he could. Having disposed the fleet in this army, he gave it orders to hoist the sails, designing to come into a ...

Literature, Science, &c

... of to ilay are brutes !-low, vulgar, coarse inm miridedill-maluneredbmttes ! They grin and chat. up er, I graint yoe, at a woman like so manyumlnkeys; di' bilt as for the true respect which is showrn in ane! to lion, in sacrifice, in ediurasice and forbearance ...

Literature, Science, &c

... Cominander-iii-chief, and led the whole forces of Rhteuimnatisme Bay, Scurvy Is- land, aud Nervous Province 'into tule heart of my or! dominiiisns, ansi drew tip his army in form of bat- tie. I drew up my force against bite in the fol- lowing cruer:- First ...

Literary Notices

... with it pack of fentlhets. It one grasshloppor, as the preacher snith, ' is a burden', insupportable indeed must ble w vole army of gasahoppers, let Anacreon and Cnwley sing US thev Slav. 'I'bere are writers sO mono- tollously said, tlhat we never weep ...

PARLIAMENT AND THE EXHIBITION

... has killed everything else U The Court, the two I-ouses of Parliament, thle niobility, t the gentryI, the coosmonalty, the army, the police, car-I ariages, cabs, and omnibuses., arc all danicing -attendaisce bi ttpon it. The shops are unfrequented. Th'le ...

Our Library Table

... rendered `t more pleasant towards the close by a short supply t of provisions. But all was forgotten on the J FIRST VIEW OF LAND. tc It was on a magnificent spring morning, that we sounded Banks's Peninsula, and sailed slowly along s its northern shore ...

Literary Varieties

... sense tent aud frequently enjoyed the Pasha's lies- far pitalitics, that this lady is good evidence of whet a Turkish wit: woman of ranic and education may become under the new qui' system. She presides at the table anod receives bier husband'sap frie ...

OUR LIBRARY TABLE

... tbro'h ?? lo.le'aid. de~sp~erat'e, ,struaggl ?? armilesof F~rarie,Aitad like-i .wise andospiouots upbel'd hitmjin 'the ?? land and o f 'Europe. T' ' Ttraies ow'diUrgr* )iiectal Slezt~he yw ...

LLINELLAU COFFADWRIAETHOL

... are hidden. .To.those whoare the sufferers in it,directly. i7 3or incdiiectly, .if we..except the dwellers in the land. through which an army takes its devastating, way' -war will always carry its eompousating balm It is a fan differ ent thing fora' ?? his ...

CARNARVON

... nepp was patent-,yith a force scattered o.er the globe, inferior by'fouC no'r fifvefold: vavri were it ioncentrated,- to the armies of France. Who could gabas4r it4. WaIt' not then clear that' however Well-ordered their house'. was within-however valuable ...

Our Library Table

... ous army into effi- I l~axey,-anrd though the lessons of war may gradually io -)upphy that militacy character in wvhich, for the present, ge( AIRi deficient, her gres battaillonxe, and her iout-poxcred lox f-iuasures, will fail, like other armies and ...