Refine Search

Newspaper

Graphic

Countries

England

Access Type

3,036

Type

1

Public Tags

More details

Graphic

MADAME LEROUX

... whether it is possible for me to speak with you ; and, if it is possible, I will. You know R. Tell him this, and tell him I catn see him no more, nor read more of his letters. If I can bear to speak to any one, I can bear to speak to you. If he wishes to move ...

THEATRES

... gong T.E Tim curious run, so to speak, upon dramatic versions of the well-known anecdote of Ganick's generous effort to cure the stage- struck young lady of her passion, seems likely to be of short dura- tion. Mfr. Wyndham has abandoned his intention ...

VARIOUS VERSIFIERS

... truthfulness, speak of Chaucer as his master. The end of Dudman in Paradise is so exquisite that we are disposed to forgive the episode of the Saints-only we put it to the poet whether it is not doubtful art to make SS. Peter, Paul, and Thomas speak and act ...

The Theatres

... equally divided between OthelZo and the Lady of Lyons. Yet picturesque scenery has been painted for the occa- sion, not to speak of new dresses which are rich and rare. Hitherto it has been assumed that the outlay which these things imply can only be re- ...

Magazines

... Hundreds, on Her Majesty's Ministers, that is to say, on the style and manner each of these distinguished personages has of speaking and bearing himself in Parliament. Thus we are told apropos of Lord Beaconsfield's distaste for facts and details, when ...

THE READER

... Hence in Social Ques- tions (Macmillan) the Rev. Llewellyn Davies does not speak as the mouth-piece of his party; he is a prominent Broad Churchman, but not pre-eminent. He speaks, however, in a way which will commend him to all reasonable men. Treating ...

MAGAZINES

... of course, is therefore ?? who care to watch the slaying of the slain can read Lord Brabourne on Mr. Gladstone's Plain Speaking. The opening article in the Coienleporary is entitled The Papacy: A Revelation and a Pronhecy. It treats largely of the ...

LORD BROUGHAM'S AUTOBIOGRAPHY

... when he speaks of the virtues of the clans of Struan and Kinloch- Moidart, whose Celtic fire and genius saved him from the disgrace of being nothing better than a sluggish, torpid, prosperous English squire. Of hismaternalgrandmother he speaks with en ...

RECENT POETRY AND VERSE

... actors were certainly not bashful, since Mr. Walburg announces that his own paintings were inspired by genius, and Hector speaks of himself as personally resembling a god. Judging by his quoted lyrics, it cannot have been Phwebus Apollo. Were there nothing ...

THE SECOND PART OF THE GREVILLE MEMOIRS*

... the Ladies of her Household, it was Greville who, being characteristically asked by Lord Melbourne, Have you any means of speaking to these chaps ? and, replying in the affirmative, was asked by his interlocutor, the ex-Premier, to give from him a few ...

THE THEATRES

... entertainment, interspersed with clever dialoguc. Its music is of the old popular kind, which does not require any voice to speak of; and its literary pretensions do not rise above clever puns of the old-fashioned verbal species. But its action is brisk ...

THE READER

... been much among the gipsies, speaks their language to perfection, tells English gipsies the stories he has read in foreign gipsy books, sings them Hungarian and Macaronic gipsy songs, and shows his readers that he speaks from actual knowledge. He admits ...