POETRY

... tide. Speak lindly to the outcast! there may be within her yet A retrospect of purer days, which she would fain forget: A truiting laither's last fond look, a dying mother's sighi, III some deep cavern of her hcart, upbraiding, still may lie. Speak kindly ...

POETRY

... POETRY. SPEAK GENTLY, Speo eontly-it ir bettor far To t,1 by love than fear; Spoak geutly-let no hotsh Word mar The 6o00 Iva might do hore. Speak gently-love doth vwbisper low, The vowa that tri-e hoarts bidd! And gently ?? ncoaonts dow; Affeotion's voieS ...

POETRY

... Whose heart may prove true to the end. We none of us know one another, And oft into error we fall; Then let us speak well of our brother, Or speak not about him at all. A smile or a sigh may awaken Suspicion most false and undue: And thus our belief may be ...

THEATRE ROYAL DRURY-LANE

... we have spoken. We went yesterday afternoon to The Theatre Royal Drury-lane, and heard an IPalan opera, of which we will speak. The opera c selected for performance was D ntzetti's comio opera, I 1I Cauipanlzelo, the singers Lilliputian, whom Mr. 1 ...

POETRY

... palms! Itiat one dread King who stronger is than thee Stands in thy gate: the solemn funeral psalms, The grand pathetic organ speaks thy grief;- Poor men's death-music are their sigha and sobs;- &alke to either comes Life's Lord and Chief- Alike from either ...

POETRY

... Whose heart mayprove true to the end. We none of us know one nnother, And oft into error we fall; Then let us speak well of our brother, Or speak not about him at aol. A smile or a sigh may awaken Suspicion most false and undue; And thus our belief may be ...

FOREIGN BOOKS

... reprinted a rare pamphlet, first pub- lished in 1605, entitled I La Chemise sanglante de Henry le Grand,' in which the dead king speaks to Louis XIII like the ghost in Hamlet, and reproaches his son for not having avenged his death. He, too, points his words ...

The Marylebone Music Hall

... Oh ! steer my bark. Mr. Nat. Brooks dis- played considerable humour in two or three laughable comic songs. Generally speaking, we have not much faith in children who show themselves to the public with the word precocious attached to them; but there ...

Published: Sunday 29 September 1861
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 754 | Page: 5 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

MR. DAWSON ON ESSAYS AND REVIEWS

... eci- cially if it came from the other aide. After speaking far- ther concerning the terms of disapproval used by those who object to the doctrines contained in the book, Mr. Dawson proceeded to speak of the legal aspect of the question. Avoiding the ...

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 ...

A short time Ago, the Bishop of 4 Mr. Spur/eon a* f indeed, of cf in the tnetrnp /:i? whom

... Christ's can 1 ;?. Qiotic;- this j Baptist Mag?zinc for this inmiti, Mr. Spurgeon add; 41 are halcyon in of I Christ thus speak of one another. Northern Daily Express records which ladies possessing property thorn with attention. One this f was and who ...

THE THEATRICAL EXAMINER

... difficulty to be contended with that a stage ghost never knows how to speak. There needs either the special qualification Booth is said to have had, or an actor as good as the best Hamlet, to speak the ghost's part perfectly. It is no sign of Shakespeare having ...