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A LATE LEEDS ARTIST

... exposure to ungenial wea- ther while on a, sketching expedition. One who knew him well and had many opportunities of observation, speaks ot hhe amiable disposition and many estimable qualities. 01 his modesty mention has already been made. He seems to hive shrunk ...

LITERARY AND ART GOSSIP

... been more deeply beloved than my dear father; the servants at the GroTv wept for him a for a father, maid Mr. and Krs. 0i95XZ speak of their loss as the heaviest trial- that has ever befallen them, though they have had tbeir full share of sorrow and siffering ...

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 ...

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 ...

MR. RAMSDEN'S CONCERTS

... laving hadi to be removed i a fainting state from the vestibule. Conernin-g the concert itself, we are glad to be able to speak generally in terms of comnendation. The chorus and orchestra were described as being those of the Yorkshire Festival Society ...

LITERATURE

... could never tell whenl it wsga day or when it was night. He had no one to speak to, for nO one was allowed to speak to him but the keeper of the prison, and he was not allowed to speak to his prisoner. EHe had n~othing to do. Days, weeks, mnonths passed on ...

LITERATURE

... however, for this fragment that has been left to us. Every one who had tho good fortune to meet Dr. Clutlicie, or to hear him speak in the pulpit or on the 1ilatiorm, must feel how simply and natu- .rally this biography lis bcen written-bring-ing the por- ...

LITERATURE

... It is asserted in Persia that if only' help, or if only the tip, of tire tongue is out off, the sufferer cannot speak, though he can speak if it is entirely removed. So aware of this fast was Z al Khan that he made interest to have the whole of that unruly ...

LITERATURE

... proved in May, 1847, not only delights to speak of the affections of his wife, but is anxious that she should not suffer in her personal appearance by the incapacity of the persons who had taken her likeness. Speaking of his wife, who was dead, he ?? is my ...

NEW BOOKS AND NEW EDITIONS

... power ?? quald in say other part -of thewol, UpntewoJhse who think thus of Parliamentary oo'mn ae'ne a sspecial obligation to speak'plainl an ihursrve- of its defeats. Flattery has at all-tmsadinalpae beae the morthl 'enemy of every fomo oenetto which, it ...

FASHIONS FOR AUGUST

... Mariai gauzeloeyte on the crown. This fabrc a rather earcloigsk gauze, Is a very tgreatn sucea this lummier. This leads mue to speak of some fresh innovation in :the way of hats and bonnets. in spite of all the extraivagmucesof present fashions, there are ...

NEW BOOKS AND NEW EDITIONS

... of a modern work, that there is scarcely a superfluous wood in it. It covers a wide field, and it is no mere compliment to speak of it as a model of ecclesiastical history. Patient, thoughtful, and eloquent, Its pages are a store of wealth, from which ...