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VISIT THE GREAT SALE DRAPERY TE ARO HOUSE WITHOUT DELAY. BURNS AND FINE WRITING. ; If ever there was a; poet born on purpose to illustrate the difference between the poetry of genius and the poetry of talent, between the poetry of impulse and the poetry of effort, between the poetry of inspiration and the poetry of gestation ; in short, between the intrinsical and extrinsical gift—surely that poet was Burns; One can hardly open his works at random without finding some proof of what we say. His worship of the true fire, and his almost god-like revelry in the use of it, may be universally estimated by his corresponding contempt of the borrowed light. His perception of the infinite value of the one, and the pretentious hollowness of the other, were equally clear and strong ; and in making allusion to their respective claims, he was not in the habit of mincing matters. What's a' your jargon o' your schools, Yotir Latin names for horns and stools, If honest Nature made you fools, What sairs your grammars ? Ye'd better tae'n up Bpades and shools, Or knapping-hammers. A set o'dull conceited hashes Confuse their brains in college classes ! .'. They gang in stirks, and come out asses, : . Plain truth-to speak;' And soon they think to climb Parnassus By dint o' Greek. Gie me a spark o' Nature's Are ! •"' That's a' the learning I desire, -' Then though I trudge through dub and mire, 'At;plough,or ; cart, .. ~ My muse,, though hamely in attire, ' . . 'May touch the heart. ," ' " :;" And yet, not to detract one moment from ] the infinite credit Burns had in the little i culture he so manfully strove to give him- \ self, who can read his letters without perceiving that even that little made him not a.little pedantic sometimes? And in his poems, too, we have now and then a phrase such as'f'the tenebrific scene," and a few.others of that description; not many, but just enough to; make every, true lover of true poetiy; inwardly thank God that the poet's culture went.no further in that direction, and. that he escaped the vice of "fine writing", by ;a" happy ignorance of-.it. :.- • ;;.■ ' ,": J ■-,..- A SPECIAL CHEAP LOT. COLORED SATINS, TURQJJOISES,; IN SHORT LENGTHS, FKOM Iyd TO sym,: - Usually sold at 7s 6d and 8s 6d per ytird.h;': ; NO W CLEARING -tIOV-H AT THE WACHTEL STORY. A pathetic story has been published with regard to the manner in which Wachtel, the great tenor, first became known and famous. He was originally a poor cab-driver at Dresden, and one wintry night, as he was singing to himself upon his box, the audience of the Grand Opera began to disperse. The entranced multitude gathered round the unconscious cabby, who finished his solo amid a storm of applause, and the very next day a largo purse was subscribed to send him to the Conservatory at Paris. Mr. Screecher, who Jives in this city according to a correspondent, was much affected by the story, and, as he too had a voice, he determined to be sent to Paris at once. So, last Tuesday evening ho waited until Continued on sth column.
WELLINGTON.
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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/NZTIM18770728.2.16.3.2
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New Zealand Times, Volume XXXII, Issue 5100, 28 July 1877, Page 2 (Supplement)
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528Page 2 Advertisements Column 2 New Zealand Times, Volume XXXII, Issue 5100, 28 July 1877, Page 2 (Supplement)
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