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RHUDDLAN

... he concluded by reciting the follow- ing appropriate lines- Speak gently! it is better far To rule by love than fear; Speak gentlye let not harsh words mar at The good we might do here. IC Speak gently ! love doth whisper low The vows that true hearts bind; ...

Poetry

... thee I'll tell. I'll speak of mountains towvring high, Cloud-capp'd as though they touched the skcy, Where birds of prey are seen to fly, And gain the steep O'er-bangtug rocks,-with ravines nigh, , Both wide and deep. I'll speak of dashing, foaming streams ...

FAIR PLAY FOR WALES

... woman under certain ',cir- foumitances, who oen speak no -English, and yet never sees -a woman warder. who canr speak .Welsh. ..0: u i Every Welsh prison ?should have 'a male and female' warder who. can speak Welsl. We do noteven stop there. We feel strongly ...

Poetry

... angry seens, And hoarsely mocks. I'll speak of mines,- boundless store Of peerless, priceless, sparkling ore; And of thy undulating shore I'll often tell, Where strangely mingls ocean's roar With sea-gulls yell, ru speak of forests, where the pins And wids-spread ...

Poetry

... 1;lrious gilt Acd we will' Jldly bhoer it home. It speak-s of da s of ereal toil, Xlhen, stiltieig o'er ?? fnrrow'd field, I e sower scattered wvide the seed, Tit.t clath, its produce rich might yield. It speaks of hoors, whean in the vale, TIe husbendiatill ...

LITERARY NOTICE

... instance, cannot speak Welsh. Almost all its technical terms have no equivalents in the langu- age of the Principality. Suppose anyone was to try to translate a book on chemistry into Welsh! Why, the thing is impossible. But; the Gospel can speak Welsh as a ...

MARIE ROZE CONCERT AT CARDIFF

... Shinonetti, eo to speak, carried all before him, This celebrated violin virtuoso is again with ,Madetme Rnze's company, anti with him is Signor Genniro Bisaccia, thei eminent solo pianist and composer. The ptogramnie. generally speaking, wilt be made up ...

AMATEUR THEATRICALS AT THE CARDIFF TOWN-HALL

... spectators, in a pleasant entertainment. As we t it stated yesterday the pcece de resistance was the x pleasant comedy of Who Speaks First ? It is I S d always an ungracious task, and sometimes an un- . -s pleasant one, to criticise the performances of lady ...

POETRY

... pure pearl of pearls, T'his sweetest girt of girls, Eteaven's saile attend her l MIargale. SAMuli LANGLM. BEE TH OVEN. It God speaks anywhere, in any voles. To us 11 is creattres, surely here and now We hear him, while the great chords seem to bow Our heads ...

Poetry

... to bed, or get up? * Clock does all this, but I see and hear, I pralee without dsattery.. blame without fear, I sonmetises speak plainly, sometimes give a hiut, And laugh in my sleeve when I le/ture in print: You'll never guess, now, hut the truth would ...

THE AUGUST NUMBER OF THE NATIONAL MAGAZINE

... defer speaking for the present. hirs. Jell netto Fothergili's verses to' Sconehenge.-which follow, are excellent, both in form and colour. The stipendisry magistrate for Swansea, Mr. 3. 0. Fowler, comes next with an admirable paper oc **Speaking and Preaching ...

NOTREDAME AT THE THEATRE ROYAL, CARDIFF

... placed on the Cordiff strage on Monday night, as tie tastes of the dress circlveere T presumably consulted last week. Let us speak X first of that which was undoubtedly the most on- | joyable part of the evening's entertainment-the scenery. Thishas been ...