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OUR BISHOPS AND DEANS.*

... determined flirts. MNr Ar-nold, We tipose, uses the word engaging in its new sense, according to ?? we speak of an engaging curate, as we speak of a 'marrYilg man. '1 Itc plodder ?? can neither preach nor flirt, nor appreciate literature or p.oetry ...

THE LONDON LIBRARY

... should have accepted with stih. greater gratification if I could feel that I had rendered yon any great service. I can only speak of myself es one of those few remaining Ulonuments of antiquity who ra- collect very freshly the original foundation of this ...

THE FASHIONS

... square ends and pockets; the sleeve is a part of the mantle, Qi and only covers the upper part of the arm. It is, SO to n- speak, cut in the mantle, and is only half a sleeve; but, ler nevertheless, exceptionally graceful. The whole is bordered n- with ...

WINCHESTER

... : honour b opt-n ih.e dt.on except the warm interest ii™ always felt should Let the city of Winelicstc.*. no .iiu whatever speak with authority to matters conm ctcd with art ; but i'or this very reason th )u.rht migl t i>e the better abb to express ideas ...

FASHIONS FOR JUNE

... a cottage at Aber, gave evidence that Mr. Hughes and Miss Hamner passed as man and wife there, and that Mr. Hughes used to speak of the child as his. He was committed for trial at the Carnarvonehire assizes, but bail was allowed. THE AGReICULTtURAL LABOURERS ...

Literature

... cultivation aind ames of such crops as are most serviceable to this class of persons. Mr. Rlobort Egerton is the svriter, aind speaks with the atuthorily of long observation and experience. The third manual treats of Bee-Keep~ing, and gives an account of the ...

SOME FALLACIES ABOUT ART

... he is of opinion that in art as in all other respects the nineteenth is as good as any other century. When cultivated men speak about literature they usually shake off the conventional assumption that everything that is found between the two covers of ...

SOME FALLACIES ABOUT ART

... he is of opinion that in art as in all other respects the nineteenth is as good as any other century. ii hen cultivated men speak about literature they usually shake off the conventional assumption that everything that is found between the two covers of ...

JOKES OF THE PERIOD

... sea-you stand five feet le- eleven, thirty inches across the chest, and we'll say edeleven inches deep-well, I should say, speaking at rE andom, you would lift at about eleven stun' three ce quarters ! [Horror of invalid-his fellow passenger was a.n ...

MR. WILKIE COLLINS'S LAST.*

... pleasantry takes place between the two animals to the perfect sati- faction of both. The unfortunate Ariel, says Mr. Collins, speaking in the character of his heroine, was standing before a table with a dish of little cakes placed in front of her. Round ...

MR. WILKIE COLLINS'S LAST

... pleasantry takes place between the two animals to the perfect satis- faction of both. The unfortunate Ariel, says Mr. Collins, speaking in the character of his heroine, was standing before a table with a dish of little cakes placed in front of her. Round ...

Magazines

... earnest seeker after truth, and a firm upholder of that which he believed himself to have found. We must leave the essay to speak for itself of his social qualities, in its own words of his manly force tempered with gentleness, playfulness, and love; his ...

Published: Saturday 05 June 1875
Newspaper: Graphic
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1131 | Page: 7 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture