WHAT DO WE?

... vengeance day, And the aworeT that devours I Our gutns are hard at the gate, Our wrath to wreak; Only the word they wait- Speak, England, speak I F. WN. B3.- AS IT OUGHT TO DER- At the Dociks, wr, ites Dr. IfAIMArL I'tItook ase1mpie of Mrlodialr.s Tay, h10ich ...

AMATEURS AT ALDERSHOT

... Warren (81st Regiment) was Ernest Waldburg, and supported the character in an easy and agree- able manner. This gentleman speaks distinctly,. and is audible all over the house, which is not always the case here, the acoustic arrangements being far from ...

Published: Sunday 02 July 1876
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 505 | Page: 4 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

ENTERTAINMENTS

... el- was deserved, she said, had well-nigh worn out AR her patience. She had been used to speak to m animated clay, but she now felt as if she had f been speaking to stone. Successive flashes of stir her eloquence that had always been sure to elec- wil ...

MUSIC

... purpose and no inconsiderable skill in artistically rendering his inten- tions. Not havina seen the score of the work, we can speak only of our impression after a single hearing; perhaps we may return to the Magnificat on a future occasion. The following ...

POETRY

... POETRY.' I . - I COUNSHL.i Ever act the manly part, Speak the Ianguxge of thy heart; Ne er disguise, for place or pelf, Thy better, truer, real selt Gold will perisb, thou shalt live. Mark the couusel that I giveo Thou wilt lose thy place on earth, Thou ...

MR. STOPFORD BROOKE'S LITERARY PRIMER

... What, again, would a child learn by being told that Spenser was full of Christianized platonism ? On page 73 Mr. Brooke speaks of some of the love poems of the latter part of the sixteenth century as possessing a passionate reality, others a quaint ...

POETRY

... dreams of yore, And, fondil Inemuory-a pupe perusing, We sigb forlosses it ca t reatore Of the morrow's brightness Hope Is speaking- ,The proniiied Eden for whioh we pray, The high aod the lowvly alike are seeking; The wise are willing to point the way ...

Poetry

... I'm sore perplexed - The last one proved his doctrine true, But so too will the next. TIIEOLOGIST. ?? one avers-nor doth he speak As doubting, or afraid- That In six days, in one short week. This world was ' perfect, made. GEOLOGIST. Another there with ...

DRAMA

... impicates $ th orising in the west of I E lpad in l; 1 asd th0 inci4enit of th Etrl of Feyve- ?? ?? toobtain apardon, not to speak of the name S Welthorp, uigne~d h9 ,po~of tho.,laroters, ?? the nonie one of . the pear4ons Whoim the w1w QbaXgca with hbarburing ...

Poetry

... the bud, Perfection hidden, but understood fly all who could think aright. Text from the marriage morn, In its silence to speak thro' life, Of duties, put on with every fold, iao ctange that life'e silver into gold. If love link true husband and wife ...

MUSICAL FESTIVAL AT LLANELLY

... Eaid whi in he relflected on the fact that mosdt of l's artc'rcee were Welshmen he could not but t rt't lis incapacity to speak to them in it.r . tolnge, and the more so because ho hi ew tfiat the great object of eisteddfodau InS tO pirousote and foster ...

LITERARY NOTICES

... Christopherson. Those who place them side by side with the sermons of the'late Frederick Robertson,of the same town and church, speak in the language of flattery land exaggeration; but, like everything Robertson wrote,. they are broad and catholic, full of ...