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QUEEN'S THEATRE

... and he would almost have his friends by his side deaf for a while, for he was going to speak a great deal in their praise, and when he said so, lie was going to speak justly of them, for he was not going to say a single word in flattery or exaggeration ...

LITERARY GLEANINGS

... shall eat the bread of f affliction and drink the waters of sorrow, yet because the - Lord hath put it into my month I must speak it. ' There are other preachers, yea too many, which preach and s persuade thee otherwise, feeding thy folly and frail - affections ...

VARIETIES

... saim sweet voioeof the 'nightingal - foi' some have natural]y sweet, mild, and soft voices'9when they' talk, vwhile others speak in lotud, strong, and masculine tones. The same, is true in regard to, singing.' in ',Germany. every child s tagilt to'ase ...

LITERATURE

... Dissenters, and is certainly not to be met with in m: the Church. O f this vehemence the writer thus speaks :- a. 0) Let not English readers imagine, when we speak of the d vehemence of the Scotch pulpit, that we mean only a gsn- o tlemanly degree'of warmth ...

LITERATURE

... for all who care VI mark the mar- isa ts snniet relm o labur. t on tioe it bckno- - Iag tesapof the Lake School, of Which, speaking Justly Wrsorth was the only pedagogue; at another it Shiesthogh the %voirdlish mists, called into life from thle nooks and ...

MUSIC

... Of horne and haplpiness, of love in the springtide of youth, of the courage of England's Eons, of war and of peace, they speak in words that must at once gain the oar. At one time we stand on the eliot rent plain and mark, beneath a terrific heil of ...

LITERARY GLEANINGS

... leaving behind, or a more sincere desire for their hi welfare after he bad left them. He was not Bo weak bI ibut that he could speak quite distinctly; and I thought ca that lie would try and say something to them in the a way of a parting advice, were it only ...

VARIETIES

... 'cisos''~shrieked -she, andV~ down she;'et ~.o~osi'a'sers agafin.,. The. ti third 'time she came to- the suifade too ?? a speak, but as theo'water closed oveir her, sher thlew .ip p, her artasicro~sidd 690feefoiejngi', anud disappeared. . - . - -Anvaca ...

LITERARY GLEANINGS

... the first test of a truly great man is his humility. I do not Lmean by humlility doubt of his ownapower, orhesitation in speaking big opinions'- but a' right 'undarsatn'ding of .he'relation betweenziwhat he can do and -say and the rest of the world's ...

LITERATURE

... obtaining the d mastery over, the spirit? Mr. Gilfillan thus tenderly touches this sad part of his subject- s Byron, when speaking of Harold's delight in the gran- deurs of nature, says- of Had he kept his spirit to that height, h -le had been happy-but ...

VARIETIES

... e ;years ago, and. was very properly M regarded by. Alra. Montagu as a letter not to be parted ke with. We have beard her speak admiringly of Burnts, at amid in the presence- of those who loved to hear wlsat she M hadtosay about him. Onre anecdlote, andtsat ...

LITEARY GLEANINGS

... Shakaspearian and historioi ?? Lord Ba con ret Sthe a uthor of the plays attributeda to Shakspeard., Or, dprec more strictly speaking, 'was ~FrauciB Bacon-for Bacon ta was not a lord until long after the plalys attribO ted to O- ~Shakspeare were on the stage-the ...