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Daily News (London)

ENGLISHMEN, AS PART OF THE INTERNATIONAL EXHIBITON

... regret to add that the offenders are not always drunk, nor are they confined to the lower orders. English gentlemen, as a body, speak the truth; they also boast of being able to hear it ; but of this I have my doubts: and as so much has been said and written ...

LITERATURE

... was at a loss for somebody to speak Italian to the Papal .Nuncio, said lie would undertake the duty cheer- fully if Italian were spoken in Irish, and so it is with languages learned by Englishmen in six months ; their speaking of German, French, or Italian ...

FINE ARTS

... the pictures of the ohd masters, lent for that pul)rpco. by the vatrious possessors. The British Institution continlues to speak of the brief oppor- tunity of copying a few pictures, which is thus ...

THE INTERNATIONAL EXHIBITION

... and was escorted round the Exhibition by M. Teston, the com- missioner for the Algerian section of the French department. He speaks French to perfection, and expressed a good deal of grave satisfaction at everything he saw, and finished his tour in the French ...

THE INTERNATIONAL EXHIBITION

... INTERNATIOONAL EXHIBITION. TO THE EDITOR OF THE DAILY NEWS. SIB,-In your article of to-day on the Interna- tional Exhibition, you speak of the sale of season tickets being unfavonrably affected by the purely commercial character of the opening ceremonial, and ...

THE INTERNATIONAL EXHIBITIOIN

... contents, find it expedient, in self defence, to prosecutein such a case? The law, in like instances of culpable neglect, to speak gently, is grievously deficient; it is high time it were amended. Omission here is practi- cally tantamount in guilt to commission ...

THE INTERNATIONAL EXHIBITION

... exceed- ingly curious as well as beautiful, and the skill and taste with w hich they have been embroidered by English artists speak well for the art education of our countrywomen. The Commissioners have decided that from the 1st September next the Exhibition ...

THE INTERNATIONAL EXHIBITION

... the elaborate fancy ?? in hair exhibited by Mr. Augustus Her- nunml. The design is most elaborate, but it will be seen and speak for itself. It will be sudli- cediot here to note the marvellous nleatuess of the execution and the taste and skill with which ...

DRAMA

... in his hand a dead fox, of whose incursions into the henroost he has been constantly speaking throughout the piece, and, whom he has at last got rid of Union speaks a very clever double entend-e speech, in which the predatory ravages of the fox in the ...

THE INTERNATIONAL EXHIBITION

... Imperial plays on the beach with other childrenwho are also frequently invited to join him in the court of the v villa. e SPEAKING BY THE CARD.-AS a pedestrian e tourist (says the Orljacnais) was lately proceeding to- wards Tours, he asked a man who was ...

EARL GRANVILLE ON ART EDUCATION

... of the country. (Hear, hear.) I Will not now say what he did for science, but this is, 1 con. sider, a fitting occasion to speak of what he did for the pro- I motion of art and the diffusion of good taste among aul classes of har Majesty's subjects. That ...

LITERATURE

... annotators have indulged. We wate can scarcely fili one play in which they are not seas sn.ore anxious to speak for him than to let him floa speak for himself. Take Hamlet for example. The sure phly has scarcely opened when Marcellus, referring Las to ...