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Article THE MOUNTAIN BREEZE. Page 1 of 1 Article MISCELLANEOUS, Page 1 of 7 →
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.
The Mountain Breeze.
THE MOUNTAIN BREEZE .
BY BROTHER 6 . TAIT . I love the breeze on the mountain ' s brow , With its voice so wild and free As it bounds from its birth to the vale below ; Or dies on the distant sea . I love to gaze on the moon at night
, When the sky is bright and blue ; With a thousand worlds reflecting light , And thousands of angels too . For who can tell , but each star in the sky , Which sparkles so calm and clear , Is nought save the light of an angel ' s eye , That beams on some loved one here .
I love to be where the heaving boom Of the sea — comes on and on ; To tell of the long-lost mariner ' s doom , And his perils for ever gone . I love to be where the graves are green , And the grave-stones old and grey ; For there may be felt , and read and seen , How Spirits have passed away .
Miscellaneous,
MISCELLANEOUS ,
LITERATURE , FINE ARTS , DRAMA , & C COURT NEWS . —The King , on the 19 th , paid Kew a fourth visit , which the inhabitants marked as an intimation of their gratitude for his Majesty ' s bounty towards their church , by making the day one of public rejoicing . A triumphal arch was thrown across the road in the centre of the green , ancl the striking effect of a village fSte welcomed the
monarch ' s approach . The churchwarden , Mr . E . Scard , as the carnage stopped , presented the King with a splendid standard of white silk fringed with gold lace , inscribed with the words , " Gratitude to the King for 200 free sittings for the poor , the spontaneous bounty of King William the Fourth . Long live the King . " Archdeacon Goddard and the Rev . T . T . Haverfield and White , conducted his Majesty through the churchand were afterwards invited to partake of refreshments in
, Kew palace . An equestrian statue of George the Third has been erected in Pall Mall East , and is a most striking likeness of that monarch ; as a work of art , it deserves the highest commendation . The King of the Belgians has paid the King a brief visit at Windsor , which afforded much gossip among those who remember to forget that family visits , however short , are some proofs of domestic regard , and that
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.
The Mountain Breeze.
THE MOUNTAIN BREEZE .
BY BROTHER 6 . TAIT . I love the breeze on the mountain ' s brow , With its voice so wild and free As it bounds from its birth to the vale below ; Or dies on the distant sea . I love to gaze on the moon at night
, When the sky is bright and blue ; With a thousand worlds reflecting light , And thousands of angels too . For who can tell , but each star in the sky , Which sparkles so calm and clear , Is nought save the light of an angel ' s eye , That beams on some loved one here .
I love to be where the heaving boom Of the sea — comes on and on ; To tell of the long-lost mariner ' s doom , And his perils for ever gone . I love to be where the graves are green , And the grave-stones old and grey ; For there may be felt , and read and seen , How Spirits have passed away .
Miscellaneous,
MISCELLANEOUS ,
LITERATURE , FINE ARTS , DRAMA , & C COURT NEWS . —The King , on the 19 th , paid Kew a fourth visit , which the inhabitants marked as an intimation of their gratitude for his Majesty ' s bounty towards their church , by making the day one of public rejoicing . A triumphal arch was thrown across the road in the centre of the green , ancl the striking effect of a village fSte welcomed the
monarch ' s approach . The churchwarden , Mr . E . Scard , as the carnage stopped , presented the King with a splendid standard of white silk fringed with gold lace , inscribed with the words , " Gratitude to the King for 200 free sittings for the poor , the spontaneous bounty of King William the Fourth . Long live the King . " Archdeacon Goddard and the Rev . T . T . Haverfield and White , conducted his Majesty through the churchand were afterwards invited to partake of refreshments in
, Kew palace . An equestrian statue of George the Third has been erected in Pall Mall East , and is a most striking likeness of that monarch ; as a work of art , it deserves the highest commendation . The King of the Belgians has paid the King a brief visit at Windsor , which afforded much gossip among those who remember to forget that family visits , however short , are some proofs of domestic regard , and that