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Leeds Mercury

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Yorkshire and the Humber, England

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Leeds Mercury

CHARLES HALLE'S CONCERTS

... the soft end subdued tone imparted to many asesages of the minuet, or to the jubilant treatment of the finale, we can only speak te the highest terms of praise. The symphony is not a long one, but it is studded with gems of the loftiest musical composition ...

LITERATURE

... meetiig assem- bled. Look around upon the hollow esuaro of facesr still and solomnu. What a call for volunteers. Who will speak first ? It is the foremost man of them all-thi venerable burgher standing first ict their roverence for his position and character ...

LITERATURE

... frot ?? air, siid I, icc, tc' kec II itiiaito speak tile ,ii bii?, to icilk Childishly, &C. Frejich ?? ' t itl ?? rU i'eek In/caz, lrom ica, fcc, ropre- Seitinig lice lirst ittlempts of aL childi to speak. l'siic, terally l/ce crsrc-da'i/r. From Nud'ger ...

LITERATURE

... the ear the French Revolution shouted on the house-top-that man would be free. It was the same demand for freedom, though speak- ing in another language, and mingled with many jarring notes, The spirit of the times, it has been said, like the Ghost in ...

LITERATURE

... skill it a pasessge iii one of her neovele, whero the heroinois speaking i of her having isked her lover for a lock of his hair, and cut it off at the usometut's hrupulse. Long after, in speak- in g of it to a cotipEaniols, she says it was one of those ...

THE PARIS EXHIBITION

... the Esliit~itionl buiildings have been strictly reuistructeil. The tout8 Of dile citrire ?? is that of fi quasi-ellipse. To speak auera plaitily, it is of ftsc shape of a dish. Areariti i mitll ii orrice orot cencitrie galleries, cut into so many bleck;s ...

LITERATURE

... toed, Anil oct55 erily dare. Vi'l?ier'?c slur ihiel uses bat ned I his li?ii I Its ijasir In some Lutes on the Spring,'' he speaks of the cominig of lbs cuckoo; hut says that- has lame's we lies sir airt edit craw Wi tiseiltia tier, For yearly be Irselahtici ...

LITERATURE

... love me long. Alt little Afaude, with the floating hair, ?tttl the oud, red bps, and the face so Wo read your heart in that speaking eye, Ia that Iluehisig cheek asid iin1sutieet sigh, iti that restleis foot and s:ft-eung tune, Aid lc'w words murmured, Why ...

LITERATURE

... -' Where is that ? I ask-ed, with a look of astonishment. Oh, that is the arches inderneath the Chariig Cross Hotel, speaking of it as soms delectable abode. It would be diffcut to inagine a niore draunatic contrast thas that presented by those poor ...

THE GREAT FRENCH EXHIBITION

... circular shape, how- ever, has many drawbacks, especially in the ease of the less powerful, but not by any meamis (artistically speaking) less impiOrtant, countries that exhibit, which sometimes find themselves conifined to such a minute wedge-shaped seg- ment ...

LITERATURE

... bespeak a double origin; indicating that what we utter is at once the voice of God and the voice of the people. I am going to speak without any re- serve. Painful as the subject may be, it is desirable that the clergy should be made thoroughly aware of it ...

LITERATURE

... reign of ,2fftheleed the merchant city was again the a' object of special nod favourable legiolatien. H-er institutes It, speak of a commerce spread over all the landsi whiols cit bordered on the Western Ocean1. FlemnigsFand Freticli1- ci' men, meii of ...