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Daily News (London)

DRAMA

... alleged weaknesses and vanities of the sex. Thke Peincess is a subject worth returning to, and we may take an opportunity of speaking in detail of the per- formers engaged in it. The company is remarkably strong, iin female talent at least. On the whole Mr ...

THE CRYSTAL PALACE POULTRY AND PIGEON SHOW

... when he was young, and which certainly made a deep impression on hsm. It is recorded in his life that an aged clergyman, speaking to him about his own religious life, said to himn, Young esan, you cannot go to heaven alone; you must take others with ...

SOME ESSAYS OF LEIGH HUNT.*

... but those conic- moe crated in his eyes by having beend the residences of the distingurished authors. But he could attm ?? speak completely out of himself. He was vibratory Ha to an unusual degree for a prose writer. In some of his essays there is the ...

MUSIC

... (violoncello). A speoialty in the even- Ping'sperformauces was the first essay hereof the young pianist of whom we have had to speak on several Coca- siosIS in terms of praise, both as a player and a oomposer. Although the sonata of Beethoven is by no means ...

DRAMA

... acting; bout it is to be regretted that the actor arn the general effect of his performance by making this virtuone countryman speak Slironghout flue play in a sort of subdued sob, whicb, though due we believe to his Isaviag lest his parenIS at some previous ...

CURRENT LITERATURE

... upon the problems of the present day without using it to barb a sarcasm against political or social opponents. For instance, speaking of theappointmcnt of Warburton to a bishopric he says many of the clergy were grievously offended, as clergymen have since ...

FINE ARTS

... of a 'orsntide procession, exhibited two years ago at the French Gallery, and now at Mr. Graves'. But these are not, so to speak, the produce of our teaching, they are foreign in technical method and squally foreign, we regret to say, in the masterly r ...

LITERATURE

... sumptuous engravings of his chefs d'euvrme represented in this book. Let us take, for example, No. 182, of which the author speaks somewhat slghtingly. Tins singularly elegant design shows two ?? fighting in a pasture. Be hind them is a shattered oak tree ...

CURRENT LITERATURE

... should perhaps say that the Rev. Mr. Smith warmly commends Portugal to all those in search of an accessible mild climate, and speaks in high terms of the kindliness and hos- pitality of the people. The Leters of Sir CAarlea Bell (John Murray) are selected ...

CURRENT LITERATURE

... reminiscences now I published. Of the care with which this daughter I (Mrs. Bayne) has edited the hook we can hardly i s speak too highly. Hier interpolated remarks,-; . which are so printed as to be easily distingihdl 1from themei text, are gxrmluishe4 ...

DRAMA

... by an audience who were rather puzzled bht the intricacies of the play, cod the genrael slowness of its development, not to speak of the sapcrarldadce,'of 'tcfchical allusions, many of which can scardely be expected& to be intelligible to the generalptablfd ...

CURRENT LITERATURE

... fact, 3 bring out very clearly the very remarkable cha-E racter of the deceased statesman, his extraordinary I greed, so to speak, for learning of all sorts, and his vast power of assimilation of all sorts of subjects. The correspondence included in this ...