Refine Search

LITERATURE

... receive it at the present day, and In which alone it can effect the redemption and conver. donof theireculs. Thereviewerthus speaks of the author'sd plan- It ls not his intention to begin bydiscusaingmlracles or the trustworthiness of the Gospels in detail ...

MISS SIDDONS' BENEFIT AT THE THEATRE-ROYAL

... hearty cheer. ^-(lond and prolonged cheers). I thank you much! 'and now comes .on the painful part, A common phrase enough I speak it from my heart. -(cheers), And I 'success be mine, Itl owe it much to you . Who gave me ?? better things I -do.\ May I come ...

FIARS PRICES—1865

... feel that the accession to our cause of such men as Messrs Bright and Mill, and other able expo- neuts of public opinion, speaks trumpet-tongaued for our country. I hope that ere long vwe shall , have a considerable number of English friends ready to ...

LITERATURE

... Ilaglis. . 3. THE PonrciCA Won1CS oF EDWARD YOUNG, WITH{ LsFE Edinburgh:. Gall and Inglis.il Happily we do niot need,;in: speaking of these johimes,l to say: one wvord of their conitents. Let it be Witre thati reviewers often content themsglve~ with looking ...

LECTURES ON ART

... which, he said, from various ;reasons, had only succeeded to a small extent in accomplishing their object. He then went on to speak of the relation of ornamentation to the fine art, tstaing that both were regulated by the same principles. In illustrating ...

THE INDUSTRIAL EXHIBITION—THE KING'S EVIL

... suddenly checks his mirth as be reads further on- Who are the represents- tives of the working classes? Even twitting you with speaking of yourself as such at times, and to show the eminently logical turnof his mind, he argaes from ?? any 12 men in the city ...

DUNDREARY'S PRIVATE THEATRICALS

... Sothern, it was so completelytraas. formed and re-arranged before the week was half over that, though Ut is still impossible to speak of it in terms of unqualified eulogy, it is only the barest justice to acknowledge that he has given It nsw, and cuuch stronger ...

LITERATURE

... SC5oLAPL, &c., &C. By E. H. Plumptre, M.A. London and Glasaow: Alex. Strahan, 1S66. (Pp.229) Wxe had occasion is3t year to speak in terms of high praise of Mr. Plompitre' L-azarus, and other Foo3i'e-a volume in which the power of the author showed Itself ...

DR NORMAN MACLEOR ON HIGHLAND MUSIC

... Highlawde r:'like a: man to' 't epeak'his mind right' 6dit~.pplivl e 'and laugh-' :a ter). 'Well, then 'I 'JVditively'leant speak a . mingle'word' unleml 'ou'g Me 1a1iune ipon the I b a gpipes-IIo(loud. ?? laughter). c [A piper here rcade his appearance ...

LITERATURE

... said, solemnlly, going up close to Felix and laying a han1d one his shoulder, speak not lightly of the Divine onerations, and restrain unseemly words. 1I'm not speaking lightly, said Felix. If I had not seen that I was makinug a hog of myself very ...

THEATRE-ROYAL

... Indeed faultless, and It was bodied forth to a degree almost without fault. Of the general cast of the piece we desire to speak with much respect. The interest of The Lady oi Lyons is so well divided between the hero and heroine that a shorteomslng ...

LITERATURE

... obscurely because of the unbaptised, but when they are gone we speak plainly before the iitiated, And Gregory of Wananzen, You have heard to mrioh of the mys. ery as. we are allowed to speak publicly fn the ears of all; and the rest you shall hear privately ...