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Literary Notices

... utterance. All men, bellmen and hawkers excepted, speak much more than they spout. Indeethere are numbers-we do not allude to ladies of eburse-wlto tnever speak ia. publir, 'and yet possess a capacity of speaking in private 'whicho is absolutely boundless ...

DR COLENSOS BOOK

... His whole soul revolted against the notion, ?? the Great and Blessed God, the iAlerci. ful Father of all naulkind, would speak of a servant or mnaid as inere I money,' and allow a horrible crime Ito go unpunished, because the victim of the brutal usage ...

SINGULAR STORY

... Orleans. The letters are addressed Dear Julia and Children. The first ones speak of having sent her money, with some doubt in one case whether it was honestly ?? The late ones speak of want, not having been plt sickness, &o., and at least intimate a request ...

THE BETTER TIMES TO BE

... future time, will take the shape You chance to give it-shape it fair or foul- Speak to it in your actions; it will hear. Few words live long; but great deeds are the tongues That speak to every age and all mankind. 'The poet is the prophet of the good- Time ...

LITERATURE

... forms cannot be identified with the direct energies of an all-pervading willit is uuphiloso. pshical, the author submits, to speak as if the forces of nature were separate from the power of the Creator. To discover the cause is not to exclude thelidea of ...

Literary Notice

... are able to write accurately and elegantly-how few can read aloud in a manner at all tolerable, not to say pleasing.' As to speaking, it is only two or three here and there-the rari nantes in gur'gitc nasto- who can rise to their feet and utter a cotuple ...

POETRY

... Old music, unforgotten still, Around me rings and swells. Oh, wooing voice I ob, cruel voice . Wily will you haunt me sol Speaking the old sweet tenderness, The love of long ago. An angel form, a blessed face, A picture, fading never I The anguish of a ...

Literary Notice

... Paul's Epistles, all breathing a most earnest spirit, and ?? often by great pithiness of expression. In h1s firt dis- course, speaking of the unsettled religious tendencies of the time, continually oscillating from scepticism to superstition, an d from super- ...

Literature, Science, and Art

... agencies of the eleclric telegraph there is nothing else so mar- vellons as receiving intelligence by sorund. The appa- tus speaks a language, a telegraphic langsage, as dis- ti-ict in tone and articulation as belongs to any tongue. 'The sound that makes ...

Poetry

... touched me with its dreamy shade, Bat the full moonlight fell on her. And as she paused-I know not why- I longed to speak, yet could not speak; The bashful are the boldest-I- I stooped and gently kissed her cheek, A murmur (else somi fragrant air Stirred ...

LIBERTY OF ATTITUDE

... not be poosed, ' tor Le Fevre-I shall put it in this form .attachment to th soiU. People speak of love of the country, but.we find that many of those who speak of love of the country prefer the city. The. encouragements which we receive comes from the ...

THEATRE-ROYAL—MISS GLYN

... a-dlkr, e A diztict -jand appropriate utterance to every wo~ .i6! pctiajyi. fitted for it.;_aud. the.lan- c gpagq, as she speaks it, falls on the ear like a-- piece of music. The otheris the incarnation of 4 tregpdy. In what can th; delicate daughter- ...