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THE SWEETS OF COURTSHIP

... Siltco yet rti sii ?? a foe, And lovo setliout a voice. of Ob, for suc) live, such sterling stuff, ;o Tlle very stnba vould Speak ; id And such oIU alIoI ?? be enough- B13t, ?? ! I li:- r a volcc-hoiv gruff!- Thto sillenco iio10 doth. break. Svoet ilear ...

THE PLEA OF THE SUNBEAM

... light.. Oh, let me in I Why from your close-pent homes Do you abut out the golden sheen of light? Issue your summonas-speak I the wanderer comes, Chasing away the ?? of night: Not the day's tranquil rest; the night that dwells, All hours and seasons-one ...

THE FASHIONS

... fashionable as blue :-silks, erapes, tstes-neerly a~nrca blue. Head-dresses, as I said before, are innumerable: generally speaking, they coavespond with the stylS of the trimmings on the dress, as I have endeavoured to exemplify -in the above descrip- ...

MUSIC

... thiat he scarcely3 seemed to be the . same person. His luF Se ear has caught the pzonunciation of the language, which he now speaks with - at least as -much propriety as any'other foreigner who has performed the Dart; he has3 entered into the spirit of the ...

FINE ARTS

... understanding and criticising it properly without a 1 ,ie. far deeper acquaintance with it. It almost vexes us ye) to have to speak of such a picture at all, s1 from the poor two minutes' contemplation, W.. which is all that can be awarded to it, es, at the ...

MUSIC

... love fof music in its higher and severer forms; and, therefore, it i ver p bable. that the .thirty bawling madrigahans ho speaks of were singingsomeof thoseintricate harmonies which, though they wre'too rough for his effeminate ears, are how.a-dsin no ...

LITERATURE

... to prefer them to whois we speak be. firi fore ourselves, especially if they ho above Us, will, whom in no sort is we ought to begin. Let your countenance be pleasanthut in serious matters somewhat grave. in writing or speaking, give toin evr esnhsdettlacrigt ...

LITERATURE

... latter merely turned to the jury and observed, .1 leave it toyourselves, gentlemenwhetheritwere probable that this man should speak thus to the Earl of Surrey and he not strike him. The strong hand, the firm will, the sufficiency of the man to hold his own ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... Lady Russell. As they are now published, we would have them become, more than they ever yet have been, a household book. We speak of their writer as a high-hearted woman, and a heroine, and so far we do well;-hut her nobleness and fortitude, her piety, ...

DRAMA

... also a man of strong will, end does not give vent to his most violent emotions in idle saving. With this qualification we can speak of Mr. Nicholls'- peorm. ance in terms of great admiration. We have no doubt it would provehighly effective in any theatre ...

THE SCRAP-BOOK COLUMN

... sins sins too whose pnaishment shall be burnt into the brabi as with a redhot iron.- Who and What we Are-abib of very plain-speaking addressed by a member of the London Hurmanistic association to the Bishop of London, SrKavun& DELIaACY OF TEE LADIES or Lxlm ...

Literature

... on their backs, 'aud-i don't know what Insane emblems of Bervility.and absurd bedizenments of folly. Their very manner of speaking to what we call their masters anji mistresses will be a like monstrous maIsquerade. .You know no more of that race which ...