On this page
-
Text (1)
-
Untitled Article
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
-
-
Transcript
-
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
Additionally, when viewing full transcripts, extracted text may not be in the same order as the original document.
Untitled Article
• ' ' nRn J jtif Ifff 4 UVljHatU jfae £ i ) t | ufj | jl 9 w 41 i ' ' f £ fbUfti 9 > ; f j k ^ && * ^^^ rtyi ^ PpBJh-Fith ^ il hi * te& V ) m-, if' i if . f |« The mild moon a paly * shadow * \ iiow advance , And , sweetly silent , lighten hill and plain ; And stU < tiy ^ ta ^ & 6 te £ s ] gttt !«^ & £ thw « gh tile main Of dark and wkte ^ rk&fttMrfe broad Extent ; , New dusters momentlyresume thmr reign ; *
Their twinklinf ttdnteft , still beauteous and unspent , Dapple the jetty sk ? with bright embellmhnMtit . ' - ^ p . « K The return of the people homeward , and the revivhig pciver over them of the world ' s catenate the concluding topics : * Now homeward throng the people , fallen and dull : Some countenances gleam , while others g lare Broad signs of nothingness ; and others fuU '
Do show of stjlftitet busy , anxious care ; And others brood , asrif they did prepare Within their hearts some hopefol golden scheme . To kill the approaching week . Some seem to fare But ill at heart ; and all around do seem Waking regrettiiiglj from some enchanting dream . 1 Aj ^ d evil spirits seem to fasten on u E ^ h ^ vlsa | e ^ nCttcu ^ ttvehtion , ctinnin ^ , fraud ,
< i v ™< Afl * ftfti ^ JW Wdeii family , one hy one , 4 , _ A ^ Q ^ the . people spread themselves ahroad . ' ; : ' '' Tfigmnbii ' orihe mighty town , Unawed , ^ His sly approaches makes , ' his workings speak > . w / In every look ; each to his favourite gaud
Awakes ; and now the same prepares to seek , Through the hot strife and struggle of the coming week * 4 Sabbath ' s past!—Farewell , sweet Sabbath-day f Farewell ; AWeet Sunday f S p eed , kind spirit ! speed Thy bright return ; for , whilst thou art away , ' Many a doomed and sinkinglieart must bleed ; And cruel lawless rulers will not heed ,
Their humbler brethren , through their week of panu -ii Once more , light mystic day , farewell indeed I , ,.. , v « < Hasten * oh , haste ! resume thy magic reign , ] ,, j ^ ji > Farewell , sweet Sunday I haste , make baste to shine agflan ( r ~ p . 83 , 84 , The description and emotion of these verses have in theftf all that ' eloquence of truth ' which Campbell has made the definition of * Song . There are some useful hints for cogitation in the nolefey ^ 4 concl ude by extracting three of them , interesting alike for the facts '^ H ^ y record , and the writer ' s comments . ' ^ ' ( A Swinish Multitude . — ' I need not go into the origin , and history of the term " swinish multitude , " and how it was applied to die people-s ^ me yean ago : no doubt it is fully in the recollection of every on *; at m Agents it is quite fresh in mine . I shall never forget the time when I flwt iread that
phrase in & newspaper ; nor shall f easily fbrtf ^ t the * Ibelitijf whieh it produced among the circle inw ^ ch I HidVed ^ t IH « t time . 1 think Hw&e them now listening to the reading * < of the ^ pajier ; with Wl the feigns of ) £ aUui shame reddening in their ewtm ^ ti anc ^ Ab < rrf t this time Mb Ctyft bet r published his paper , in which he , In ^ fcW ^ iiraia ^ iMimkaMv T ^ wWfat ttytfe . lirged thm p «^*< X&tfr& * mti * Ak& ^^ * & >** + Uying ^^ 'T m ^^^^^^^^^^^ m ^ W ^ HJ ^^ ittT ^ I ^ C ^^^^ T ^^ ^ ^^^ BlI ^^^^^^^^ fcTy ^^^^^^^^ VV M * ^^ mW ^ t ^^^^^ m ^ M ^ ^^ r ^^^^ Fw W" ^^^^ r * ^^^^ M ^^^ ^^^^ T ^ TPV ^^^ F ^ B ^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ^^ fellow * went teriou » ly to -work ; and fAW $ Pfap " H&H « &Ky&f 8 k VKk
Untitled Article
erittm Afoiim ) iff
-
-
Citation
-
Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), Sept. 2, 1835, page 625, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2649/page/61/
-