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Countries

England

Place

Leeds, Yorkshire, England

Access Type

596

Type

596

Public Tags

LITERARY AND ART GOSSIP

... rancou be Do thby, too, by prophetic fury driven, IDetest us for a reason they foresee? Of woe to those of whom all men speak wel, The converse also conld we take for true, InB what serenity might Britons dwell, Maigned, derided, feared, the wide world ...

CHRISTMAS BOOKS

... of the poor, and learns how much virtue and good ithere are in their lives. , Coltsfoot does not conceal their vices, but speaks of them with gentle words of coin- misseration. From the courtiers of No-land the Prince receives but little encouragemout ...

LITERATURE

... 187 so long tis any hook of prayer, even the Prayer Book -sul itself, is your only way of speaking to God. Never rest e itill the habit is formed of speaking to God in, your owTI tain words. The book has reached its 38th thousand, and upa seems to us ...

LITERATURE

... idolatry. To this disfigured style must be added a decided tendency on the part of the author to speak for her characters instead of allowing them to speak for themselves-a tenieniy by no means confined to young novelists. It must be confessed, however ...

LITERATURE

... elevation to the throne, worn an anxious expression, to I iwhich, it is said, he was a stranger before he became d Sultan. He speaks in a very low tone of voice, without ii eny such gestures as most' Orientals indulge in, and it ?? altogether in European ...

LITERATURE

... forgetfulness in others' good, may obtain the real com- uiand of such a one. But the persuaaive force with which the right speaks to him is beyond all istellectual measure; it stirs him in depths he cannot reach; its heat is in excess of its light; it ...

SELECTIONS FROM PUNCH

... sale in the provisiou shops, ii indeed, that sort of tongue is what it is bought for, and would not, if it could speak, anti would speak truly, call Having, by a retrogression in point of taste to the days of Hogarth's bags, trodden their feet out of ...

JASPER'S DECLARATION OF LOVE TO ROSA BUD

... to you than I am. Sit down, and there will be no mighty wonder in your music-moster's leaning idly against a pedestal and speak- ing witle you, remembering all that has happened and oar shares in it. Sit down, my beloved. She would have gone once more-was ...

THE FASHIONS FOR NOVEMBER

... sleeve. For many dressmakers it is a delicate question, comprising many dilliculties; the style of sleeve cannot, properly speaking, be determined upon until the dress is nearly finished; then, and then only, can one arrive at a right conclusion as to the ...

THE SMITHFIELD CLUB FAT STOCK SHOW

... animal belonging to Mri. Thompson, m Baillie lEnowe, Kolso, which attained the extraordinary 1 - weight of 27 ewbe.. Report speaks very hsighly of some of al the Northern animals, and althoughl the Scotch exhibitors 1) are hardly sanguine of repeating their ...

LITERATURE

... passion-all have worked auainsst the preservation of thle old masterpieces. The people ! says M. do Laborde; 1 do not speak of the enlightened love for the arts of the French people; the lessI we say of it ?? better. They leave too often in history ...

LITERATURE

... Dliint. '&c. Lveadnou Joseph 3sMutete sad Co. when not speaking. Rehsation sbo hoJ be ostried on as much as possible through the nostrils; Above-all, never catch inthebroath through the month, when speak- ilg, reading, or singing; but always through the nostrils ...