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Leeds Mercury

EXTRACTS FROM THIS WEEK'S PUNCH

... been completed, and we understand that . other pevesois are likely to be proreesed against. aLs Our Kirkwall correeponslent, speaking of the above e- charge, eays-This ease gives rise to a most important Be question as to the Customs regulations for the ...

LITERATURE

... striutlv apposite to a notice of the 0ook before us. Ur. Afax MEuller writes evidently under leep feeling as he says, in speaking of his own loss, I leel as if anotlier cable had snapped that tied me to this Vospitable shore; and he thus spsaks of the ...

LITERARY AND ART GOSSIP

... autograph, relating to the author of the book, J. H. Glauber- Id saydo Glaleber Is an arrant knave. I doo beathink mese he Speaks the otye Wonders whiche cann rtte ho eaccoorplished, ?? Mt ye Lavwfsf for men toe. Ves endeavouiers. The volume will be pat ...

LITERATURE

... case of the Par- C liameut against Laud was even stronger than it appears to be in Rushworth and the 'Breviat. The Dean l speaks very strongly of all those with whrm the Arch. bishop came into codlision during his troubles. Abbot, his predecessor at ...

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 ...

GEORGE ELIOT'S NEW NOVEL

... seemed at an end more absolutely than it cau do to a nialu at forty. But before they had ceased to look at each other, he did speak agai. 'Is that tho'last -word you have to say to nie; Gwen- dolen W Will it always be so?' She could not help seeing his ...

LITERATURE

... this the storm grew'loed apace; The water-wraith was ehrnikiig; And in the acoivl of beaver each face Urew dark as they were speaking. -But still, as wilder blew the wind, And as the night grvw dreerer, Adown the glen rode armed men- Their trampinpg sounded ...

LITERARY AND ART GOSSIP

... -istaeil ?? t she tvilt avail rerseli of their words ratler thrin her own ill tteatiirg of mruh er winch ehe could mincely- speak with iirpsrtiitlity. 'liho beok will iO illustrated by fac-similes of Mr. Kingsly's skLetoh~s, ?? of 1rvereley Cburch 'end ...

LITERARY AND ART GOSSIP

... ar's 1roli'h'IDS . as yet unisolved. WeO eslI time force that resis~ts tIn) essrii lb Yiall. We Bay it resists dwathi, wve speak ot it ats stronger in the young thesirI inl thisl o1d; but wve be own nothimig nioco of it really, ?? a physiciil point of ...

LITERATURE

... inmportance hatl risen of late. My dear, lie said, in is fatherly way, moving a chair for hor as he hold her baud, I ivant to speak to you on a subject which is more nonaeit ous than acy other wtith regard to your welloro. You will gcuess what I mean. Btt ...

FINE ART EXHIBITION IN LEEDS

... him- 3sif to the interpretation of seacoast scenery in calnu or atorm. 'He has Eome iunportant works in hland of which report speaks highly, aud of which more inaty be heard hereaiftor. A Couple of large Iaudsocaltes by Banks, who resides, we believe, near ...

LITERATURE

... the subject so ably treated in his Christ and Mais, and here perhaps we have one of the finest chapters of the book. In speaking of the Fatherhood of God, we notice that Mr. Bathgate does not run in the lines of the old Scotch theoloy, as exponused ...