Au gré de nos desirs bien plus qu'au gré des vents. |
Crebillon's Electre. |
As we will, and not as the winds will. |
THE VICTIM OF DISAPPOINTMENT: by P. H.
INTRODUCTORY LECTURE to a Course on"The Obstacles to Education arising from the peculiarfaults of Parents, Teachers, Scholars, and those who direct andcontrol our Schools and Colleges": by James M. Garnett
LOSS OF BREATH. A Tale a la Blackwood:by Edgar A. Poe
TO MRS. ——, whose husband was absent in the United States Navy. On seeing her in agay company: by E. A. S.
LINES WRITTEN IN AN ALBUM: by E. A. P.
TO CHRISTIANA: by E. A. S.
THE FRIENDS OF MAN: by L. H. S.
THOUGHTS: by E. A. S.
KING PEST THE FIRST. A TaleContaining an Allegory
EARLY ADVENTURES: by J. C.
CURSE OF THE "BETRAYED ONE." A fragment:by Hugh Blair
TO MRS. B. G. S.: by E. A. S.
THE SEA BIRD'SREVEL: by Giles McQuiggin
I MET THEE BY MOONLIGHTALONE: by M. S. Lovett
THE SCENE BETWEEN HECTORAND ANDROMACHE: translated from Homer by William Munford