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Morning Chronicle

THE PRESS AND THE PLAY

... al0 othier cars; and this is true in a great measure end melt? for want of a reasonable amount of honest, trslh.et ' truth-speaking criticism of actors and pieces. le tbe And just as the sense of his privilege may cripPP tha critic, so it must deaden ...

[ill] ARCTIC JOURNAL.*

... acknowledge that we took to Lieutenant Osborn at first sight, p-iag his book at a page in which he highly ;Captlin Peony, speaking of the gallant ,a sailor with as much cordial warmth and aont ofection as if he had been a comrade of iamess, All through ...

The LITERARY and ARTISTIC BANQUET

... generously contributed to footer [cheers]. As, for example as I spoke of the working men and their aristocracy, I' may as well speak of that great conception of an illustrious prince who does not disdain to be a working man [great cheering]-I will say that ...

DRURY-LANE THEATRE

... the speedyevidence ofrsen 'eii lany, miglithaveendangeredadriam' soldnet sumed to judge for themselves. But e 00 I stood to speak in entire discont ddrntwithl fourth acts, which are laid in Australen 00o point-blank to the gold-huntmig q teds aech'5ef there ...

BERNAY'S HOUSEHOLD CHEMISTRY.*

... owing mainly to this substance, of which green tea contains as much as 81 per cent.. As a rule, the longer tea stands, or, to speak more.correctly, the longer it, is in contact with boiling water, the more astringent does it become. At the same time, a large ...

GREAT BRITAIN AND FRANCE.—WHY IS THEIR PRESENT CONDITION SO DIFFERENT?*

... impossible. Even in the little which haS been attempted, neither the right men nor the t obvious means have been employed. Not to speak f worse teachers, the Chadbands and Par- 9iggles of society have been culpably permitted to 0sarp the places of less fanatical ...

STRAND THEATRE

... protracted, and ?? sopp ito etemenits of poetic barbarism and satiric civili- -utiwn lh ok cih other too long in tie face, and speak to ?? oter iec too long and sometimes too prosy speeches be- Ibce tier uroceesd to actual blows. EcetrUcd'sV knows V OLTAIRE'S ...

LORD MAHON'S HISTORY of ENGLAND.*

... time a seat in the House-a speaker whose maiden effort was received with jeers and out short by shouts, but who has lived to speak to an audience so silent that they could hear a pin drop-and, perhaps, as a lady, whose reputation for smartnesses is European ...

PRECIOSA.*

... sorrow teaches genius to compose, will rejoice if any ucci- dent places in their way the little volume of which we are now speaking. It has been said that every clever man could write a novel. It might rather be said that there is one novel which every ...

THE FRENCH PLAYS

... jjtfce, asd she appeared to be crying as though she file, ?? also called out Oh, Christ ! and im- r.tna ran itness without speaking. He followed :r., Kingsmead-terrace he saw by the light of *h that his boots and trousers were very muddy, Ie lie bad stepped ...

BASIL, A STORY OF MODERN LIFE.*

... declare itself would speak out at last, would shine forth in the full luxury of its beauty, when she heard the first words, received the first kiss from the man she loved I While I still looked on her, as she sat opposite speaking to her companion, our ...

JOHN EVELYN.*

... country, as your grace has done that of my lord duke your husband, worthy to be transmitted to poste- rity. Wh'atshould I speak of Hilpylas, the mother-in-law of young Pliny, arnd of his admirable wife; of Puloheria, daughter to the Emperor Areadius; ...