The Royal Lady's Magazine, Bind 3W. Sams, 1834 |
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Side 12
... collection of his poems , we have spoken in a former number . It is very rare indeed , in this country , that a son of the muses , born , as he was , in the desolate and cheerless region of poverty , has to boast that generous and ...
... collection of his poems , we have spoken in a former number . It is very rare indeed , in this country , that a son of the muses , born , as he was , in the desolate and cheerless region of poverty , has to boast that generous and ...
Side 24
... collections to any extent , and therefore we may be said to have been a little disappointed . The favourite tulips ... collection ; Salvator Rosa , a seedling of Brown's of Slough ; and several others which were produced at the Hampton ...
... collections to any extent , and therefore we may be said to have been a little disappointed . The favourite tulips ... collection ; Salvator Rosa , a seedling of Brown's of Slough ; and several others which were produced at the Hampton ...
Side 25
... collections been placed under the prin- cipal awning , the facility of judging the relative merits would have been in- creased , the company had been more divided , and the comfort of the whole effectually secured ; as it was , one half ...
... collections been placed under the prin- cipal awning , the facility of judging the relative merits would have been in- creased , the company had been more divided , and the comfort of the whole effectually secured ; as it was , one half ...
Side 26
... collections of plants to fill up the society's tables , with the almost certainty of being rewarded as some exquisitely ... collection of fifty blooms by no means dissimilar , and the duplicates in which were so palpable as to discourage ...
... collections of plants to fill up the society's tables , with the almost certainty of being rewarded as some exquisitely ... collection of fifty blooms by no means dissimilar , and the duplicates in which were so palpable as to discourage ...
Side 27
... Collection of Flowers , from Mrs. Lawrence , F. H.S. 3. For Garden Roses , from Mr. T. Rivers , of Sawbridgeworth . THE LARGE SILVER MEDAL . 1. For Garden Roses , from Mr. Stephen Hooker , F.H.S. 2. For a miscellaneous Collection of ...
... Collection of Flowers , from Mrs. Lawrence , F. H.S. 3. For Garden Roses , from Mr. T. Rivers , of Sawbridgeworth . THE LARGE SILVER MEDAL . 1. For Garden Roses , from Mr. Stephen Hooker , F.H.S. 2. For a miscellaneous Collection of ...
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Allnatt amateurs Apples awarded Azalea beautiful best collection best dish best specimen bloom bright rose Cabbage Calceolaria Chubb Clarke Class colour Cosmo cottagers crimson cultivation dahlias double compact double cupped double expanded double globular Earl Edmonds exhibited eyes Fanny Kemble feel floriculture florists flowering plants flowers fruit gardener gentleman give Glenny Goodleigh Grapes growers heart heart's-ease Heyfield honour Horticultural Horticultural Society James Taylor judges Kendall Lady LADY'S MAGAZINE laird less Lord Magdelene Messrs Metropolitan Society Mitchell Myddleton never pale blush persons petals Piccotees pink plants Pope and Sons potatoes pots prizes Queen Ratheram roots Rosa season second best ditto second ditto Seedling semi-double Silver Medal Somerville sorts stands SURREY ZOOLOGICAL GARDENS Taylor thing third ditto three best tion tulips varieties vegetables Wallingford Widnall Willmore Wilmer Yellow
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Side 17 - Dawson gaily cross'd the Green, In haste to see and happy to be seen : Her air, her manners, all who saw, admired ; Courteous though coy, and gentle though retired ; The joy of youth and...
Side 18 - ... channels flow ; Serene her manner, till some sudden pain Frets the meek soul, and then she's calm again ;— Her broken pitcher to the pool she takes. And every step with cautious terror makes ; For not alone that infant in her arms, But nearer cause, her anxious soul alarms. With water hurthen'd then she picks her way. Slowly and cautious, in the clinging clay ; Till, in mid-green, she trusts a place unsound, And deeply plunges in th...
Side 16 - And see the mid-day sun, with fervid ray, On their bare heads and dewy temples play; While some, with feebler...
Side 100 - Garrick would make me take his ticket to go to the trial of the Duchess of Kingston ; a sight which, for beauty and magnificence, exceeded anything which those who were never present at a coronation, or a trial by peers, can have the least notion of.
Side 99 - We have paid another visit to Miss Reynolds. She had sent to engage Dr. Percy (Percy's collection, — now you know him), quite a sprightly modern, instead of a rusty antique, as I expected. He was no sooner gone, than the most amiable and obliging of women (Miss Reynolds) ordered the coach, to take us to Dr. Johnson's very own house ; yes, Abyssinia's Johnson ! Dictionary Johnson ! Rambler's, Idler's, and Irene's Johnson...
Side 19 - Not led by profit, not allured by praise; And waiting long, till these contentions cease, She speaks of comfort, and departs in peace. Friend of distress ! the mourner feels thy aid, She cannot pay thee, but thou wilt be paid. But who this child of weakness, want and care?
Side 101 - She soon recovered herself, and said with great composure, ' The goodness of God to me is inexpressible ; I desired to die, but it is His will that I should live, and He has convinced me He will not let my life be quite miserable, for He gives astonishing strength to my body, and grace to my heart ; neither do I deserve, but I am thankful for both.
Side 17 - Two summers since, I saw at Lammas Fair The sweetest flower that ever blossom'd there, When Phoebe Dawson gaily cross'd the Green, In haste to see, and happy to be seen...
Side 102 - I was going to add in the words of Pope, till I recollected that pence had a more appropriate meaning, and was as good a rhyme. This apostrophe broke from me on coming from the opera, the first I ever did, the last, I trust, I ever shall go to. For what purpose has the Lord of the universe made his creature man with a comprehensive mind ? why make him a little lower than the angels ? why give him the faculty of thinking, the powers of wit and memory ; and to crown all, an immortal and never-dying...
Side 16 - Yet, urged along, and proudly loth to yield, He strives to join his fellows of the field; Till long-contending nature droops at last, Declining health rejects his poor repast, His cheerless spouse the coming danger sees, And mutual murmurs urge the slow disease.