Refine Search

THOMAS HARDY AS A POET.*

... Drurnwond-.Norie. With an Introductory Poem bv A'ice Ct. !Jacdonell tf Ke~rpoch. 10s. &d. Glasrow'- Wi'i- SX POEAC~S. By Thomas Hardy, 6S. Harper R')MZIS! Wi'H{OTT THPt POPE IN T'HE. CHIUit'l-1i(F E-NOLAND. By the tiov. Henry ?? Ciake BA. 4,. 6d. I-I. W ...

The Going of the Battery

... life-beats are low, Other and graver things . . . Hold we to braver things- Wait we-in trust-what Time's fulness shall know. THOMAS HARDY. ...

LITERARY GOSSIP

... present month.fa Mr Thomas Hardy and the lion. Mrs Hen- niker, Lord Houghton's sister, are to collaborate, on a novel. Mrs Henniker dedicates the volume ai of Outlines, which Messrs Hutchinson are about to publish, to my friend Thomas Hardy. Outlines ...

LITERARY ITEMS

... century; and Thomas Hardy, who can-1 le tributes a story of English oorntry life. ce . A bolt j issud. from the office of the al Fifeashre Advertiser, and sketehing theereez of of Provost Swan, tells-astory worth repeating about )w his friend Thomas Capiyl; ...

THE UNIVERSAL REVIEW

... East if we mind our own business and keep within our frontiers. The number is enriched also with a complete story by Mr. Thomas Hardy, and an ode to the wind by Mr. Swinburne. ...

LITERARY ITEMS

... is practically settled that - Professor Drnmmond's book on the evolution of rman will not be published for a year.-Mr. Thomas Hardy is understood to be giving himself a rest from fiction. He has been encouraged by the reception of his little sketch at ...

LITERARY NOTICE

... L1TEIIAIlY NOTICE. A Paor of B-ve 7yes. A Kovel7by Thomas Hardy London: Henry S. King and Co. This novel belongs to a high order, and shows a ?? acqsinutance 'with various pha3es of life, in the ranks at once of the nobility, clergy, and gentry. The ...

LITERARY NOTES

... The Silence of Dean Maitland,` has had a mixed reception. Some warm critics have likened it to George Eliot and others to Thomas Hardy, while less favourable judges ridicule it - unmercifuLly. W e think it a mass of plagiarisms -probably quite unintenti ...

A Dramatic Scene

... emancipation, as he would be inclined to regard it, to a surfeit of petting and a want of healthy excitement and activity. Thomas Hardy, with his cynical contempt for the feminine nature, would fled vanity, love of finery, or even sndden impulse, sufficient ...

NEW EDITIONS

... Edwin Hodder. It is a presentable volume with a good index.-Messrs. Sampson Low anr Co. send us The Trumpet Major, by Thomas Hardy, uniform with Far From the Madding Crowd. These are novels destined to Eve, we-will not be rash enough to say for centuries ...

A NEW MAGAMZINE

... impossible that an authoress of such reputation as Miss Grand can confound the works of two such people as George Elliot and Thomas Hardy, so we must suppose it to be a misprint. There is also a poem by Mr. Norman Gale, with a very bad illustration ; and a ...

FORTUNE TELLING

... he -wise woman is believed to exist by virtue ot he ignorance of the people, and according to si aie opultr novelists— Thomas Hardy for one, we are ,r>t sure that we cannot say Rudyard Kipling f or ull . .ther— it is not so certain th.it these wise ...