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England

Regions

North West, England

Place

Liverpool, Lancashire, England

Access Type

2,156

Type

2,031

Public Tags

SPEAK BOLDLY!

... Prophet ! Let thy tongue Speak fearles, for thie Vords aro thiMs- Words that by 1ioruiilg stars wvere eug, And angels hflyhinoa in strains divine. t Speak bodidvi Poet ! LJt thy pen Be nerved with fire that may not die; t 'Speak for the rights of ?? rnels ...

SEQUAH SPEAKS

... I C;SEQUAH SPEAKS. I | rnder this esiking headingwe pblisb stead vet. tisent to-day which is likely to attract consider- able attention in this city and neighbourhood. Modern ingenuity and experience have proved almadantly that whatever appeals to the ...

A VOICE FROM INDIA

... arise ! Oh, mother's sons ! This quarrel bears no prelude of weak words- Speak in the flashing of a ?? swords, Speak in the thunder of avenging guns I Speak, as loud nature speaks, in storm and flame! Quick as the sadden breath we draw, Oh, Justice and ...

LITERARY NOTES

... their energies, as it were, to public speaking, display such an amount of trepidation when required to make a speech on their own personal account. Mr. Irving bas improved greatly of late, but would refrain from speaking extemporaneously; Mr. Tree is nervous ...

THE GRAVE

... unnamed- ( And then-the eternity before thou wort. a 'Thou speak'st the voice thou heard'st at nature's birth, t When even the very ends of space were awed; v And till th'archangel's trump shalt thou speak forth, Croation's echo of the voice of God. Wirkdale ...

LITERARY NOTICES

... apologises for it, telling us that he has drunk so deep into' Bazlo and authors of his school that he has 4learned to speak as they speak and write as they wlite. We are sorry, if the author was dietrustf ul of his powers of original composition, that he ...

IF I WERE A VOICE

... I were a voice, a persuasive voice, t could travel the wide world through, I ?? fly on the beams of the morning light, An speak to men with a gentle might, Ard tell them to be true. rd fly, I'd fly, o'er land and sea, Wberever a human heart might be, ...

LOVE, THE DEW OF THE SOUL

... t4 Of bright and dark, but rapid days; b Beneath tebm like a summer cleudI o The wild world changes as ye gaze.-Bryant. l Speak it not lightly-'tis a holy thing, E A bond enduring through long distant years; b When joy o'er thine abode is hovering, Or ...

LAURA BRIDGMAN

... IeBwwss (BY THE SAME AUTHOR.) Laura Bridgman ! working, working, With thoso fingers, which to thee Organs are of hearing-speaking; Sightless Laura! tell to me What it is whereon thou workest, Hour by hour, and day by day, With such earnest, fixed attention ...

THE CLERGY AND THEATRES AND MUSIC HALLS

... LONDON. Mr. Headlam, in a reply to the bishop, says that be feels he should be unfit to be a clergyman if he did not at times speak as he had done in the inculpated lecture. Eie holds that the clergy are bound as officers of the Christian Church to con- sider ...

A ROMANTIC STORY

... became most anxious not only to see the famous personage but to obtain adminsion into his presence, and to be allowed to speak to him. To do this at first seomed a difficult matter; but, on learning that her hero was to call on businiss at a house where ...

MISS ANDERSON AT THE ALEXANDRA THEATRE

... despite its very apparent inequalities, is a performance of higher interest than either. This fact affords us a reason for speaking at the outset of Mr. W. S. Gilbert's one-act drama 'Comedy and Tragedy, which last night at the Alexandra Theatre followed ...