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Pall Mall Gazette

MR. GRANTLEY BERKELEY

... his own ac- count, asked him instantly to give up the name of the author of a certain article (of which we shall presently speak), published in the August number of his magazine, and refused to grant any time for deliberation. Mr. ' FRASER hesitated ...

THE DRAMA IN PARIS

... is not simply conventional, the conventionality is absurdly removed from truth and grace. The majority have not learned to speak, much less to act: they mouth and gabble, look at the audience instead of their interlocutors, fling emphasis at random, mistake ...

VILLAGE LIFE IN SWITZERLAND

... a toilette-table; and others which come rather near the I.ndex. Better do your own chores than suffer thus; but, to speak frankly, the effort, or rather struggle to be smart, pervading this part of the book results in the absence of an element which ...

FORSYTH'S LIFE OF CICERO

... us, when hC says to DELIA,-. To teneam Ioriens deicientc iann; or ill QUINTILIAN'S introduction to his Sixth Book, where he speaks of the death of his little boy; or in the famous concluding chapter to the himeolal or in the Se Vimi Gades of the worldly ...

THE DRAMA IN PARIS

... y prepared this: indeed, it is in contradiction with the spirit and language of the earlier scenes in which Madame GuaRIN speaks of her husband as the best of men, and seems devoted to him ; nevertheless, it is a powerful dramatic incident; and when GuERIN ...

THE DRAMA IN PARIS

... superior to the English in the perfection of its ensemble. Indeed, that Opinionl seems to sue to require revision. I do not speak of the Vaude- ville only, but of the theatres in general. There are good actors, admirable actors, on the French stage; ...

THE WINTER EXHIBITION OF THE OLD WATERCOLOUR SOCIETY

... for sturdy precision in the other two. Both ofthese artists are so justly celebrated and so very popular that we need not speak of their sketches in detail. Every one knows that he will find some of their cavaliers on horseback, and rollicking scenes ...

THE GLOBE EDITION OF SHAKESPEARE'S WORKS

... for instance, in EMILIA'S exclama- tion, when IAGO tries to stop her tongue. The folio, which they follow, prints, I will speak as liberal as the north. The quarto reads air for north. Liberal is clearly used in the sense of ' free, unrestrained ...

ESSAYS ON RELIGION AND LITERATURE

... Protestantism having ceased to exist s as a form of intellectual thought eve are at a loss to under- stand. As far as we can speak of Protestantism ever having been a form of thought-it represented the inductive principle as opposed to the deductive so ...

MISS BATEMAN'S JULIA

... heart, she does so in language fervid as Juliet's,- 'Tie love-~and if not love, 'Why then idolatry I Aye, tbat'sthe naife - To speak the broadest, deepest, strongest passion That ever woman's heart was borne away by ! The disproportion between these ardent ...

FESTUS

... this kind, but we have not met with a single passage of sustained excellence. One so daring in his combination of words as to speak thus of LucIFER- You look as if you lived on buttered thunder is likely to have his audacity crowned with an occasional felicity; ...