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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.
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try Wkmyoti ^ fst , arid you will tTy to kill tne first *; fttf he % rM * $ s ^ othe ? vm ^ ii ^ tft # gir # So Ifeottght i > teff ^ M # ^^^^ tW ^ fi ^ prepared . Btit the police caught Hie # ith ir % oHa ^ l ^ 4 A W tfol 5 m / M $ they pot me in prison . " « Without trial ? " ititerrupt ^ d ^ . ^^ VeS ^ WtHfiflf
trial . They put me in yonder big prison , " ( pointing t 6 btie'bft We ffiare ^ l " and there they kept me for six years . But niy Tove eame ^ tb ' se ^ n ^ By and brought me mttaey , and played with me ; and at last my amtf * £ aid ifo # ri threeHundred ducats , and I came out of prison and married the girl f ^ tttf she has brought me three little ones as tall as this " ( trepiccolini , alticostj % raising his hand to a certain height . This was all told with the utmost
coolness , yet with the most beautiful action , ; and the narrator was a fine handsome fellow who was worth waiting for even longer than six years . Naples has one fine street , the Toledo ; and the square in which the king's Ealace stands is handsome : the Strada Vittoria , too , is extremely pleasant ,, eing close Upon the sea , and the Villa Reale is the most noble of promenades ; but the town is not , in general , very well-built , and it is one of the dirtiest places that I ever was in . With the bay I was certainly disappointed . Being thirty miles in circumference , it is far too extensive for the eye to take
in at one view ; its beauties vanish in distance , and , as seen from the sea , there is , as I have before observed , a great want of a good back-ground of mountains between the town and Vesuvius . Its shores , however , when approached , are in many parts beautiful beyond description ; and if Sorrento were substituted for Naples in the old saying , " See Naples , and then you may die , " I should not be much disposed to dispute the justness of the encomium .
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ON READING THE ACCOUNT OF THE DIS 1 NTERMENT OF 4 OHN HAMPDEN . Oh 1 ever hallowed from the idle gaze , Be the loved relics of the pious dead , Nor thus profane within their peaceful bed , " Giants and Heroes" of departed days . Cliase pot the vision that unceasing plays W ^ th light undying round the laurel'd head ' Of him who ' erst for truth and freedom bled . Shall it be thus that England ' s son displays . The grateful heart that kindles at the sbtind % Offlampden ' s deathless battle ? Then littge ^ n ^ t " With eyes unhallowed neat that sacred spot , But close witli rev ' rent hand ^ he holyground ; For lo t where ^ Hampden ' s * om < ftdm ' on high . ( Calls thee to Ho ' nbui , Virtue , LibfrtfH ' ' 0 ct . i 7 > m $ . " - ' ; : " - 1 ' . '" - . " ¦ ' - ' ¦' "" " 1 : - •¦* - ¦ - ¦ _; * - " * ' * ^
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SONNET .
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Citation
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Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), Dec. 2, 1828, page 841, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse-os.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2567/page/41/
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