Refine Search

Newspaper

Birmingham Daily Post

Countries

Access Type

48

Type

48

Public Tags

More details

Birmingham Daily Post

RUSKIN ON THE ROYAL ACADEMY EXHIBITION OF 1858

... public little harm by their pictures, and whose friendship I should be sorry to lose. But the real and chief reason for my not speaking of sucs and such pictures is miy not having had tine to look at them. This pamphlet must, if it is to be useful, be printed ...

MIDLAND INSTITUTE LECTURE

... suffices; its action was quicker and more corn plete, and it was not so liable to prodhuce spasmodic action of the ?? system. Speaking of the various objections which had been urged against chloroform, the lecturer said that from time to time cases had been ...

Foreign Miscellany

... latlvy roughl stats, ?? esiseralds having thlroughl Tb~l~eand vwe hlad ahnost saids mercilessly, drilled O2cers resitnee,~tet speaks of a corporal in the gallant by :~rth from £12, Vl£ t a bracelet whimch will probably a otlte r, receu-t £200,000. Another ...

Literature, Science, and Art

... widow, that it apologises for Tostig's apparent cruelties, that it praises the administration of Harold as Earl but does not speak of him as Iimig, and although written after the conquest makes no noentioss of William the Norman or his 0f 111.A .. SCIENCE ...

THE ASTON HALL EXHIBITION

... the shade of the noble trees, and gaze on the far-spreading landscape, that they may drink deeply of the calm spirit whichi speaks loudly from nature, cheering, soothing, and invigorating the inner mals, fitting hins all the better for the stern battle ...

THE ASTON HALL EXHIBITION

... in the gun trade, is calculated to do an aesount of injury which cannot readily be remedied, end that such meci, when they speak out, ore worthsy to be Iseard. The decoration of tiles Great Entrance Hell is entirely due to tises, for while other hands ...

FLOWER SHOW AT THE BOTANICAL GARDENS

... being paid to cleaul pess F.ut neclu was here esiecisy apparent. Of time Oineriels oppnr~iics ofi arqueegenerallwe need not.speak, Mr. Catliiig'5 uduetli .profearranging.cEleiilliartfcs.a district, The following scre the award.s of thi Jadg,3s STove Ost ...

ASTON HALL EXHIBITION AND FETE

... of a foreign school which considers itself very high in art, is curious as a study. Of Dubufe's Adam and Eve we need not speak. Is is an old acquaintance. A very fine portrait of Byron by Phillips, which ices been sent by Lord Leigh, decorates the Queen's ...

THE OPERA AT THE THEATRE ROYAL

... wedge-like disposition of their numbers. Of the performance itself, with one or two distinguished exceptions, we are compelled to speak in the came con- deumnatory strain. The choreses were not merely weak and inefficient, but absolutely out of tune and time ...

THE CONCERT LAST NIGHT

... Mr. 13ickley, Mr. Moore, Mr. Mason, Mr. oflydn, and Mr. WerIss--0 by rivers.e.. h ilsos and Save hllr it is hasunecesry to speak separately of the performers or the pieces mny of them1 are So well 111ownI, Miadame WVeiss was the pincipa Clsoprano, and ...

MUSIC

... staff the cathedral pos- scsses, there is little reason to fear that it may again occupy its forler position, Last week, when speaking of the Mendelssohn monu- ment about to be erected at Berlin, we noticed briefly the progress music was making, and the high ...