Literature

... tissirna it was fearful I As the light increased, I iutld see Carola's face-it was likq that of the dead ; -lie could scarcely speak--her voice sounded faint and far off. As the morning drew slowly on, it became bitterly toll : aud, worn out and drenched as ...

BALANCING THE BOOKS.—1874

... resistance of Mr., Gladstone, was passed by an overwhelming majority, the ?? closest and ablest political( associates voting and speaking against him on the question. In financial affairs the new Chancellor of the Exchequer manifested singular coolness, soundness ...

DRAMA

... success, without hoping that the School Board authorities will not put a stop to this most beautiful of Christmas shows. Speaking of School Board authorities, a somewhat an- dacious and clever joke is perpetrated at their expense in the VIcTORIA Pantomime ...

LITERATURE

... views on inspiration is-here a kind of ad- vantage. Where another- man would be con-' cerned .to make Paul, or John, or James speak . in every text the langage of his 'own system, Reuss is perfectly:' indifferenL! As an imnartial historian, he 'is bound, ...

VARIETIES

... Indinnopolis reporter ealls the late unsuccessful printers' strike in that city a typographical blunder. A morning paper speaks of thieving in the outskirts, which may be interpreted, picking ladies' pockets. Why is it almost certain that Shakepere ...

LITERATURE

... than the mighty labour of explora- tion itself. So great a portion of his life was spent in Africa, and away from English-speaking people, to say nothing of libraries and literature, that he can hardly be expected to write with the classical lucidity of ...

TRAVELS IN SOUTH AMERICA

... Author of the History of Clubs and Club Life in London, &c. (Chatto and Windus.) We opened this volume with every desire to speak as well of. it as a due regard to the claims of justice would allow us. The title is taking, the subject is good, and the author ...

MUSIC

... introduced. The remainder of the pieces for pianoforte solo belonged to the modern school of composition, or, more accu- rately speaking, to its two greatest masters, Chopin and Liszt. By the former, Dr. von Billow plaped Nocturno, Op. 9, No. 3, and Scherzo ...

TRAVELS IN SOUTH AMERICA.*

... Author of the History of Clubs and Club Life in London, &-c. (Chatto and Windus.) We opened this volume with every desire to speak as well of it as a due regard to the claims of justice would allow us. The title is taking, the subject is good, and the author ...

SCRAPS FROM THE COMIC JOURNALS

... If this is a fact-but the Figaro never lies, it only embellishes-we can underst nd the reason of the prince being so plain.speak.ng and crusty. Bat in sober earnest we should rather believe the man of blood was a great deal more fond of drawing ...

TOWN EDITION

... merits of a piece which has found favour among playgoers for so long a period it would, of course, be altogether superfluous to speak, and we rest content, therefore, with saying that upon this, as on all previous occasions, its satire and its humour were very ...

Published: Sunday 03 January 1875
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 13590 | Page: 15 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

THE DRAMA IN AMERICA

... dlram, and make all things end well. The part of Raquard was acted by M. Henri Stuart-from the Porte St. Martin Theatre-who speaks Enllish with a French accent, and acts in the easy, off- iasid minaer peculiar to the French stage, and accounted natural-as ...

Published: Sunday 03 January 1875
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1549 | Page: 12 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture