MR. OSCAR WILDE ON FASHION
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... their dresses, and I Ino at the pictures, many splendid fars were to be g seen. Mr. Oscar Wilde wore a dull green coat 05 trimmed with otter's far, and Mrs. Oscar Wilde ap looked charming in a costume of green plash trimmed ip with silver-grey fur. She ...
... potentiy in strengthening ty stm , governing the liver, regniatien the bive'e *sI and eucinr the entire system to order he Oscar wilde, the Countess Aferaeen :tsr ',cl - I- lency the Marchionea-s of Londonderry, aid man' ItS ethers speak in the hiz-hest ternms ...
... Balaam's Aes is devoted to the ertic of Vanity Fair. Philip G. Hamnerton comes in for some sareastic :s attention, and Oscar Wilde and several others MS for VVhistler'smostcaustic wit. Altogetherthe 3g gentleart of snaking enemies is calculated to ed ...
... bed ofth ocean, were a greatly appreciated, and the genea monigof 'it ~,the piecereflecus credit upon the scncats. WI Oscar Wilde, the Countess Aberdeen, her Excel. inp Ilency the Mvarchionese of Londonderry, and many ho others speak in the highest terms ...
... is written about is invited, and nearly everybody is sure to come. From Lord Tennyson to that somewhat fallen meteor Mr. Oscar Wilde, from the editor of the Times to the youngest critic of pictures, from Mr. Irving to the newest stage aspirant who has pushed ...
... to be itchief apostle. . Bourget is a young man oecapying a ?? in F rench literary society somewhat akin to that of Mr. Oscar Wilde in England, with this transfiguring diffr - that the Frenchman has been accepted franikly and seriously, and tis-English- ...
... written no otber book of the sort, and that the announcement of any similar work as from his pen is absolutely untrue, Mr. Oscar Wilde contributes to the July nmbba'rf Lippincott's Magazine a complete -novel, entitled The Picture of Doian Gray, which ...
... Mr. John Bur- Xeston. Mr Waiter SeaLby, and Miss Agnest ut Taylor. It may b'e he mentioned that an on Monday neit Mr. Oscar Wilde'8 play . Lady Windermeres Fan is to be given at the ! Shakespeare Theatre for th~e first time in this CitY. ' when it ...
... waterproof ; nothing else is so im- portaut. A new mpantle is sure to be covered by the prosaic garment anathsmatised by Mr. Oscar Wilde. Nobody cares to put'on a new dress in weather such as we have had, So that the Streets have hardly taken on a winter ' ...
... ld before the student has made a start in life. 20 The Lady's World is to pass next month under the I. editorship of Mr. Oscar Wilde, who has secured a for- a. midable looking list of lady contributors, a list brie- er tlinj with countesses and duchlesses ...
... new seriea of this favourite magazine will be issued next month, under the title of The Woman's World, edited by Mr. Oscar Wilde. The excellence which has marked every detail of this publication since its first issue is a guarantee that the new venture ...