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... hav-.: I, Nor a thread of her hair, No mark of her late time as dame in her dwelling, whereby I may picture her there. —Thomas Hardy. ...
... hav-.: I, Nor a thread of her hair, No mark of her late time as dame in her dwelling, whereby I may picture her there. —Thomas Hardy. ...
... which embodies recollections of his youth. It is illustratel by A. B. Frost. Prominent English writers are Walter Bmant and Thomas Hardy. The American short story is exhibited at its best by such masters of the art as Bret lisrte, Henry James, George ...
... think I'm killed. Rut when I was half-way down the stairs, ma'am, thinks I, I'm a-going to lose my pension, sure !' • Thomas Hardy, the novelist, when he was looking about for a country home to settle down in some years ago, was greatly taken by a spot ...
... enough of what her countrymen call oof, why should she not start leper colonies in our 400's1 They need them badly. Thomas Hardy, the author of Far From the Madding Crowd and Tess of the D'Urbervilles, has recently been sick nigh unto death. For two ...
... Lama Lowrie, Red as a Rose is She Mehish Joseph Hatton Jenne Fothergill w. E. Norris Cruel London The Violin No New Thlnd Thomas Hardy . Ender the Greenwood Tree Any Canadian newspaper desiring to obtain copyright stories can do so by applying to the publishers ...
... out on the piazza to see the view, and, once out of the house, it was easier for him to go away i han to enter again. Mr. Thomas Hardy gives it as his opinion that the novel affords scope for getting nearer to the heart and meaning of things than does the ...
... cases of dire disease generated by total abstinence from liquor are even more terrible than those caused by excess.' Mr. Thomas Hardy, with rare exceptions, has taken no alcoholic liquors for many years. When rambling on the Continent, he occasionally drinks ...
... writers since Shakespeare have had so much of his skill in character delineation and true knowledge of human nature as has Thomas Hardy, and a dramatization of his first great succe►s, Fsr from the Madding Crowd, by so skilful a playwright as A. W. Pinero ...
... plume, and had the pleasure, well known to some humbler folk, of having it promptly returned with thanks. The admirers of Thomas Hardy, who regretted to hear of his late serious Illness, will be glad to know that he Is surely convalescent. For a few days ...
... stationary engine to a central rail between the tracks, thence through the mechanism attached to the bottom of the motor. Thomas Hardy is clean-shaven, with the exception of a small mustache. He has blue eyes, a high forehead acro's which lie thin locks ...
... and David Christie Murray. Conan Doyle was a doctor. Stevenson Nis an engineer. Walter liesant was a college prnfessor. Thomas Hardy and Hall Caine were architects. Jerome K. Jerome was a plain every-day clerk. The swiftest literary workers may be said ...
... the resolute young woman suffered much from exposure mid exhaustion, but never once flinched. The following notes ab3ut Thomas Hardy, perhaps first among living English novelists, MO of interest: Ile is a I)orse►+hire man by birth and habitation, and ...