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Ireland

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Northern Ireland, Northern Ireland

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228

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228

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THE LATE RIGHT HONOURABLE W. H. SMITH

... his country's pride, Who ne'er evoked her sigh or tear, Or gave, her pain, save when he died: Not versatile, but firm and sure In dealings just, in motives pure, No title he save one held dear, Which many seek, but few can claim: A patriot uf soul sincere ...

THE THEATRE ROYAL

... secret police force has only been too promptly acted upon. Ifnoll's brother and a friend have been thrown into prison as his nscenmnliccs, and die there, and his mother dies uf grief. Terrorised bv the result of her mad desire for revenle, all her power ...

THE STORY OF A NOBLE LIFE

... dogged courage of his troops, he would have received a peerage. He dis- covered the River Murray, he opened up the whole interior of Australia to English settlement and enterprise, and he dies untold, undecorated, unre- warded, a simple gentleman retired from ...

MY SON! MY SON!

... sleeping in the sea. I thought he would have laid me In tile valley by the stream, Where cloud of sorrow never camte Across his youthful dream- Where I taught him In our wind'rings Nature's boanties to adore, Till his ?? became as happy As his father's was af ...

THEATRE ROYAL

... believingendĀ¢h by the, I p31h ,r of the Duaheasse-th~at she is saving his tile. ty adopting this cour~se. Paul rrproauhee her mnost; severely for her treatmeortanld accuises her of being dis ...

FINE ARTS

... cally engaged in saving fur- niture, after thei manner of people at conflagrations, by throwing all frangible articles from the window, and handing feather beds with tender care down the stairs. A man ran up through the smoke to save this zealous worker ...

LITERATURE

... ending. A girl and her great c grandmother live alone in a ghost-baunted, n decayed old manor-house, without any servants, 1 save an occasional charwoman. They are all poverty and pride alone there in the tunibledown- racket-of-a-place with nO company but ...

LITERARY BOTANY

... they dog- ged the footsteps of their friends. T'his type of Isocial parasite is persistent through the. aaes. 'The |shellow in Lord Lytton's Last Davs ot Pom- peii. the Honourable Mr. Crushton, the bosom friend of Lord Mutanhed in Pikwick`-,o name ...

FASHION

... occupatio Some groups ofthree or fotr rorefurbisiring up their arms, many trying to restore a little lustre to their side- arm.s, another rubbing away at his musket, a third trying to make the brass eagle plate of his hat look more like what lie remembered ...

TOPOGRAPHICAL SKETCHES

... obuayed; tenror fixed the'm to the spot im- n m;vahbe. The mragauanimgus king deshed forward . ith a genoros resolution to save his friend or perish in the attempt. A s he approached the bank 'z of the river, the ground, undermined by the tor- t: rent, sank ...

A CORNISH ROMANCE

... your clothpA: it's hardly LI worth while buryibg that good suit of yours; it sr - will do for one of us. I pleaded mny youth, my di I accidental and unpremeditated presence, ny to newly-made wife and only child, and this at last oe seemed to touch the ...

AMUSEMENTS FOR THE EASTER HOLIDAYS

... when for the first time they meet strangers, there lurks in their breast a love for gaiety and pleasure which knows no bounds save those established by natural morality and wisdom. Compared with the natives of the other provinces, the Ultonians are said ...