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THE THEATRE

... building end of the accommodation which will be afforded to the National Gallery, and the Royal Scottish Acadezm , we cannat yet speak. We trust that there will be no occasiorf for complaint, and we are sure that the intended arrangement by which the Government ...

LITERATURE

... proof that the author has written his book in fa- d Your of the one party and against the other. Both are madet to act and speak before us, but the one is never lauded nor the other abused or caricatured. The Work is written as an outobiography, a form ...

NEW MUSIC

... t i ul Spesaks th sodripping foutain a ,,n greatserhlwsc~e rond 17 inoi E'aic byr ohs heantomimc ingsotntu u tog ii That speak tot the heart alone, t Thse evotes atibe great Ceator n often noticed Dwells in that mnightty tenet ci Ifl ?? le We come now ...

POETRY

... of love, of idnocence, and taste, Ie smoking ruins, plundered, and laid waste; Do not all thesc a feeling d(ep impart, And speak in volumes to the Christian's heart ? Throw then the dazzling pompous voil aside, That War's dark horrors from the eye would ...

LITERATURE

... a tenrirerory is, resileneetirr tire West Indies, ?? a mrtor ra-y he occasion- 5e, ally reerioclded of this fact. Not to speak of the comp-arateively clean, toe desolate, anrd unfirriished appiearance whinch soine West India hoerses (arrd particrularly ...

JUNE

... hear ct; the undried brooks of the spring running and panting through their to, leafychannels. 'Itceased,'searssColeridge, speaking of asound Of ra heavenly voices about a shiv-: tr 'It ceased; yet still the sails made on a A pleasant noise till noon; A ...

LITERATURE

... as they indolently lift their heads, ei I - rze, upwards. We naturallv infer that it is the coach that e|azes upwards. Speaking of a liquor obtained from the flower of the coron-nut palml, 1he expression is made use ?? r in its fresh state, being called ...

LITERATURE

... and states of title in which practioners may be called upon to employ them. On this subject Mr Parker is well en- titled to speak as he does in his preface. Of the forms of procedure it would be affectation on my part not to profess a considerable extent ...

LITERATURE

... Twice qid he spvipg forward to. grapple with bun, but theI neighbours held fhil-baek, auid_-everiu---time he essayed to I speak, his wiords-miassed And ,tang1~d'tokgether, lilie'*relathff~, of seaweed In ?? hurricane-stuck in his throat. He con- tinufed ...

LITERATURE

... mid that, while -every -where British capital has been invested in foreign railways, no amount ofF foreign capitalI worth speaking of has been isivested in Grecat Britain. The expense attencling the construction of railwvays in I this country is far greater ...

HORTICULTURAL SHOW

... the kindness and attention paid to their wants and wishes by Captain' Howvling and his crew; and on this point we can also speak from personal experience.-lncernesa Courier. STRATHPEFvIiteK Sc's. - hiis lobveelny nook in ai beautiful flow freshly and freely ...

LITERATURE

... missing- her dinner onece in a way. parti- -calarly when she gets a good early tea. If we likd not teioughr, said Mr Wilsor; speaking lnar. and turning to Anne, that there might, perhaps, be a chance l I of yeur not coming. wie mighlt have got an egg or a ...