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Place

Glasgow, Lanarkshire, Scotland

Access Type

4,157

Type

4,157

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NEW MUSIC

... Wreath is care- fully comnlosed, is graceful and flowing. We could have wished that Mr. Barr had chdsen other words; for-and we speak it with deference to his ?? do not think thm wvords the best adapted for singing. We ?? other faults besides, for instance ...

HEINE'S RICTURES OF TRAVEL

... To-night there's a ball in the churchyard, So come-l will dance with thee therel A spall came over the maiden, She could neither speak nor stay ! So she followed the Forin-whicl, singing And fiddling, went dancing away. Ficddling, and dancing, and hopping, And ...

DUNDREARY'S PRIVATE THEATRICALS

... Sothern, it was so completelytraas. formed and re-arranged before the week was half over that, though Ut is still impossible to speak of it in terms of unqualified eulogy, it is only the barest justice to acknowledge that he has given It nsw, and cuuch stronger ...

LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART ITEMS

... Another article in the review is devoted to the second volume of Mr Hfepwvortb Dixon's Her Majesty's Tower. The reviewer speaks in flattering terms~2f the book, and seems to take a special interest in its subject-the E ng- lish Kremlin, as he calls it ...

MISS [ill] AT THE THEATREROYAL

... tion,. and always furnishes at least an intelligent c reading of the part. What we dislike J in his style is, that while speaking with, E perfect clearness and fine emphasis, he chops M the text into little blocks of speucb, so to say,, rn and raises ...

MATHERIALS FOR THINKING

... depths the lover, Fondly seeking, findeth there: On herdewy lips repose All the glories of the rose ! The Lily turned to speak, soft smiling With a proud yet gentle grace, For well she knew thie charm beguiling Of her pure and virgin face: The whit ...

THE THEATRES

... night, the play with which her name has for many years been peculiarly associated. It isunnecessary at this late period to speak in detail of Miss Lee's wonderful impersonation of Jo. It must long a o have become familiar to playgoers. But although it ...

THE COLOSSEUM CHRISTMAS EXHIBITION

... played in this direction, and each succeeding season the management have had the difficult task of even maintaining, not to speak of surpass- ing, their record. It is not too much, however, to say that their latest venture, which is described as i the ...

DUMFRIES AND GALLOWAY LITERARY SOCIETY

... exr;ain to you. Somewhat of this feeling be- longs to all the English-speaking people. The Englishman of the United States has it, and gives it half-humorous expression when he speaks abont licking all creatione, when he describes his empire as being bounded ...

MISERIS SUCCURRERE DISCO

... have heard a maiden sobbing- Whlill he ever, ever come 9 I know all the sigus of battle, Sounds of carnage, sights of war, Speaking to a nation's foelings, Crying to us near and fax. Cold and glitterswords and trumpets, And ?agnificent array; AiX! how esnall ...

THEATRE-ROYAL

... ret' a : , part Imodesty ?? LU ' Iexercise their dct.z audience I ~egaLrd ung, I but pr-oise can be bestowped t we cannot speak in the Snz ? The marked intellig:ce :w ' r, 3iss Aays aCtilL is fct u * rut last ningt (we bt::ene ,v. ; her voie was not in ...

PRINCE OF WALES THEATRE

... adaptation of the story so charmingly told by Washington Irving, which was performed in this house last night, we are glad to speak in terms of praise. The adapter has followed the original with commendable 3delity, and amplified the I dialogue with many ...