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Morning Chronicle

LITERATURE

... strategy, on one occasion, of a general who held a high reputationin the American aLnny. We mint ernot, however, forget to speak more fuilly of the lic he tlot of the story which is essentially the stoty ?? the rescue of Virginia from the alligator, shid ...

FINE ARTS

... the Roman Church finds paintings more liip'-U= = books. Vie eiig :-e before us is one of those exquisite productions which speak volumes to every heart wherein a germ of Christian feeling lies, and yet it is by no means one of those affectations which ...

DRAMATIC, EQUESTRIAN, AND MUSICAL SICK FUND ASSOCIATION

... shlefiled off this mortal coil it gave leimcI decent burial, acd provided the grind wheree to rest sm bones. Could voleiceecs speak ceoere for the merits of this admirable charity [ateplauhe] ? In the three professions which the lraieeatis Sick l1emd Associatiois ...

LITERATURE

... work with an account of the ft laws and constitution of New Zealand. On this c, subject his official position entitles him to speak v with authority, and the details into which he enters 6 are highly valuable as materials for future histories Y of the colony ...

LITERATURE

... scho, to establish a Lutheran mission at Tranquebar. Of their single-hearted t and energetic labours we have not space to speak at length here, but in Wr. Kaye's graphic pages l the reader will find how with humility and sim- plicity they won the love ...

LITERATURE

... tendency, instead of a self-interested motive, the results of that tendency, must be evincedl in higher, nobler, and, so to speak, diviner ends. Thus the banded alliance of the members of X the Society of the Four-Leafed Clover seeks to attain, by ?? resolution ...

THE HINDUSTANI LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE

... the Persian and Ara- bian tongues, but the Indostan is a smoother lan- guiage . . . a language which is very significant and speaks much in a few words. The discrepancy is not nima- velleus. Terry viewed the speech as that of a powerful Monarch rnd nation; ...

LITERATURE

... to be a strange eloquence in form, which speaks tit once to the heart in language that can only be felt, and is beyond the e power of analysis to resolve. Thus, the contrasted shapes ofi t these two firunes speak more forcibly of the inmmeasurable s distance ...

LITERATURE

... disagreeable young po1301'50 and very u-eal, As a proof, we give the following passage from a letter to her mother, in which, speaking of Captain Edgington, she says You will be anxious to know what sort of a creature lie is ; most girls have a great objection ...

LYCEUM THEATRE

... wonderful )0 well on the violin, and drew down shouts of applause. 'fhey as are the best thing of the kind we have yet seen. at To speak of the farce would be a work of supereroglitiot ?? began just before twelve, end was followed by a e- The length of the performance ...

LITERATURE

... shapeless stone The giant fancies of his muscled mind, Occasionally, too, our author confuses cause with effect, as where he speaks of the picture of the Madonna above the altar gazing a loveliness into your mind. But faults (as we esteem them) such as ...

LITERATURE

... Last of the Cavaliers belongs to a class of productions which are not often to be found in the present day. It is-and we speak with due delibe- ration-exceedingly similar to some of Sir Walter Scott's best efforts, althotigai not rendered quite so prosy ...