THE FASHIONS FOR JANUARY

... coiffures with blonde and leaves of velvet are always full dress. The coiffures of flowers are rather in disorder; if we dare so speak they justiy the axiom Un beau desordre est un effet de Part. Flowers are mixed' branches of leaves and ends of tibbon. THE ...

LITERATURE

... has in view; and he holds in still less esteem those who presume to think that works of art should be estimated as such. Speaking of 1 the poor jaded back of the Spectator and other ' such small criics, lie san:- Thcse miserable effigies of critics ...

THE REVIEWS

... the fundholder is threatened t with a diminution of his income, or something worse. Upon this point the reviewer shall speak ill his own wvords:- We are now in such a state that it is the duty of every e man, who means to remain two years more in ...

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 ...

Selections

... years. Live these fifty years 1 the Bishop roared, with actions made b to suit, t Are you mad, my good Lord Keepsr, thus to speak of King r Canute? r Jan have lived a thousand years, and surobesMajestyjwilldoi't. il 'Adam, Elnoch, Lamerb, Canaan, Mahalecl ...

Literary Extracts

... apparently an invalid, P0] 1t recovering from wounds or sickness. On my aplproaci- ult ot.Ing him, he appeared unwilling to speak or be spoken oer to. Nor is it difficult to explain why a Spaniard, wdi velt moeelg an Englishman on the walls of St Sebastian ...

CONCERTS FOR THE PEOPLE—THE ELIJAH

... sceue whlere the child is rnised fron2 the dead--the vonih oil the I mounitain-the call uponr Israel to hear wliat the Lord speake'thor the rushing by of the elements, followed by the still -small voicee.' To each of these, as to other pas- sages we night ...

LITERARY EXAMINER AND TIMES

... tii 1rui f igf~ob he mbonk. a pcrtore,,by the ao ierc ?? I aa served, pipes warte Smoked en0ovrainidlt.i, ~th the hoc~s speaking a lifttl Piiisitisefadtoohr to Englishisan presens I - aftrad'l ndtat, uvbeihad-' ?? nie ce~ved'p. rt of ?? education itt ...

LITERATURE

... wvorkl an additional charm. The simplicity of his cpistolar-y style--the unpretending daily notices contain- ed in his diary---speak so distinctly clod directly from thre writer to thre reader-, that we feel at once we have him presented to uts ais lie was ...

LITERATURE

... to wait tili the animals which had come to driuL should have thoroughly gorged them- selves; wvhen they were, generally speaking, easily knocked over fom my place of concealment. I have, however, some- times been so thoroughly fagged on taking up my ...

LITERARY NOTICES

... board. You may judge what a happy state we are ia -expecting the bailiffs every hour-t-no one we dare trust with anything or speak to;-all we say is carried of. It is a regular spy job. l'o pay rent is iopossiblo. so what is to be done, or what the end of ...

LITERATURE

... Pendeonis, swhose likeness to his Grace lied been Ce- a marked,, began to imitate him unconsciously. after they had parted, speaking Wills curt .aesteares, after ?? isastoaer of the great muan.- We have all of us, no ~doubt, met with mare thana fqpe military ...