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Daily News (London)

LITERATURE

... toithaor toythe - rase term given to anything that bound either the body ortide,winnt. ?? ; Mortimer, in his H Busbendry,,speaks of the ?? ?? 1 Birch Isof use for ox.yeaks, ?? tcI thes for faigots. - ?? Bacon uses this wor..tQ. sigo.Wy the twig: ' An ...

LITERATURE

... easily and comfortably in mediocrity, with I the paths of distinction open to him as they are in a free I country (we do not speak ot a despotism, in which the press is enchained), and had a right to suppose that, but for the neglect of others, he might ...

LITERATURE

... they are kept together'byone ereat d powerfui -led, by the bant of thir language, hc1 ira ea pliant supple ua the nations who speak it, and I 'Iay add -to this observation, that what-ag mineant British atatgnmu lisaso truly said of the Poley, Cassm, non ...

EXHIBITION OF 1851.—PUBLIC SUBSCRIPTION

... parties-from Dismeli to, Colonel Thompson-to advocate o he -cause of the pres; and If the boroughand county wjtl 1 papers speak out upon the question, the hwaedlo of the con r Exohequer will scarcely resist go fair e clalts._1pji is h Awfu. Ali ...

LITERATURE

... and parables ot this kind, One, giving a striking exemplification of the differemt fate of Turks and Arabs, is as follows Speaking of the difference between the Arabs and tbe Tork,, this story was told by one of the former. Whe Ma. honret lett-this world ...

LITERATURE

... in the opinion that if the principle wi he sought to advocate were carried out bh sientfic persons l andina mannerwhich (to speak indepentdcatl ofamere ~ la dents to the machinery, &e.) might guary against any cia interference with the prinoiple itself ...

GREAT EXHIBITION OF THE INDUSTRY OF ALL NATIONS

... his Royal Highness Prince Albert for an exhibition of the works of art and Induadq dof all nations. The gentlemen who will speak on this ocasion will fully explain to you the object.; I shall therefore refer you ta Shem, and I am quite atisfied that when ...

DRAMA

... not songht asmistance from the ordinary conventioealities of the stogir. ThA word 'f t' ca scarcely be need appro- ?? in speaking of this production,,for there ienbocontinuity of interest, and the detoeent does notresult from key natural course of eventi ...

MUSIC

... dAndorre, was produced last night with oomplete suceess. Of the merits of the original version of the .9pera we hbd ocesasod to speak on its performance at the St. Jasdes'a Theawtre on the openiug xsight of the present seaon; snd, though in' the English version ...

LITERATURE

... what was fact and what fiction. But the author has sacrificed still more. His btrongground is the ground of fact. When he speaks of aceunts of planting operations, of bursts of feeling and inci- derits which he has witnessed, he is graphic, nay pow- erful ...

MUSIC

... the notes that Chollet, when singing, was as lively and humorous, and gave as much clearness and piint to the woids, as when speak- ing. In this attention to musical elocution the French comic composers greatly excel ours, who are generally so deficient ...

LITERATURE

... the impossibility of doing justice to it within 'he narrow limits issigned to us, will be sufficiently obvious. Generally speaking, a work printed for private circulation, if worth noticing at all, calls he the fullest and most minute examination that ...