. Poems . al river of Cumberland, andrises in the wildest part of Westmoreland. P. 34,1. 20. Oer his dead son the gallant Ormond sighed. I would not exchange my dead son, said he, for any living son in Christendom. Hume. The same sentiment is inscribed on an urn at theLeasowes. H(;u, quanto minus est cum reliquisversari, quam tui meminisse ! P. 40,1. by St. Herberts consecrated grove ;A small island covered with trees, among whichwere formerly the ruins of a religious house. 59 P. 41,1. 15. JV/ien lo ! a sudden hhisl the vessel a mountain-lake the agitations are often violentan


. Poems . al river of Cumberland, andrises in the wildest part of Westmoreland. P. 34,1. 20. Oer his dead son the gallant Ormond sighed. I would not exchange my dead son, said he, for any living son in Christendom. Hume. The same sentiment is inscribed on an urn at theLeasowes. H(;u, quanto minus est cum reliquisversari, quam tui meminisse ! P. 40,1. by St. Herberts consecrated grove ;A small island covered with trees, among whichwere formerly the ruins of a religious house. 59 P. 41,1. 15. JV/ien lo ! a sudden hhisl the vessel a mountain-lake the agitations are often violentand momentary. The winds blow in gusts and eddies ;and the water no sooner swells, than it subsides. See Bourns Hist, of Westmoreland. P. 42, 1. 21. To what jmre beings, in a nobler several degrees of angels may probably havelarger views, and some of them be endowed with capa-cities able to retain together, and constantly set beforethem, as in one picture, all their past knowledge atonce. -^^^pr ^^.^y ^^. .j^Z^ HUMAN LIFE. THE ARGUMENT. Introduction—Ringing of bells in a neighbouring Villageon the Birth of an Heir—General Reflections on Hu-man Life—The Subject proposed—Childhood—Yotith—Manhood—Love—Marriage—Domestic Happinessand Affliction—War—Peace—Civil Dissension—Re-tirejnent from active Life—Old Age and its Enjoi/-menls—Conclusion.


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Keywords: ., bookauthorrogerssamue, bookcentury1800, bookidpoemssam00rogerich