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THE

RENFREWSHIRE

MAGAZINE.

1846-7.

PAISLEY: ROBERT STEWART.

1847.

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レー

ARVARD COLLEGE

OCT 26 1934

LIBRARY

Walter Foyer

POETRY.

Page

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298

No. V. The Execution,

Lines Written after Visiting Loch-Leven,

Loch-Lebo. By Miss Aird,

My Dreamings of Thee. By Miss Aird,

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149

115

392

427

. 70

Pilgrim Sketches.-V. Fallen Rome. By Miss Aird,

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The Hurricane,

185

The Old Arm-Chair,

95

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To a Little Girl. By Miss Aird,

To Miss M, on the Day of her Marriage. By Andrew Park,

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A Popular and Complete English Dictionary, by the Rev. John Boag,
Life of Cardinal Wolsey,

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Wayside Flowers: being Poems and Songs, by Alexander Laing,

280

39

40

120

118

120

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THE

RENFREWSHIRE MAGAZINE.

SEPTEMBER, 1846.

INTRODUCTORY ADDRESS.

On the advent of a new periodical for Renfrewshire and Renfrewshire people, it will be expected that, according to established custom, something should be said by way of introduction.

In our prospectus, we believe, we have fully stated our motives and our aim; and although we have refrained from giving large promises, or expecting great returns, nevertheless, we are determined to use our utmost endeavours to serve the public and ourselves; for, be assured, we shall not forget the French proverb, " Aide toi, et Dieu t'aidera."

It may be asked by what right we thrust ourselves before the public at this moment? To which we answer, We come before the world in virtue of the progressive spirit of the age, and of that right which every man possesses to do what he believes to be for the general good. We think we perceive signs and shadows of coming realities, which it behoves every human being to assist in bringing forward, by all the energies of his mind and all the extent of his influence. We live in a new era of the world's existence-a new cycle of its history has evidently begun. Old habits, old customs, old institutions, are being broken up, and supplanted by a new order of things. A generation of men that have passed, or are passing away, have found themselves bewildered with the unprecedented nature of the present movement. Their fathers were of the old world-they, the links between the inertness of the past and the vivified existence of the present. Loud and earnest have been their warnings against the impatient progress of the modern world-honest their prognostications of its ruinous results-but the business of the world moves forward still through all its inextricable mazes; it goes on its way rejoicing, and, if not prospering so largely as many of its restless spirits wish, still it goes on in hope, with brilliant visions and foretastes of the coming future. Our fathers, in the con

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