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LEEDS MUSICAL FESTIVAL

... contend that in The Resurrection i Dr. Monk led his co-worker by the wrong path, and; landed him in whatwas, comparatively speaking, as| failure. But however this may be-and it is a point' we shall not discuss-the merit of his St. John the, Baptist book ...

LITERATURE

... that lie cannot holp speaking a particular launguage, it simply means that his circumstances are such that no other way of speaking presents itself to his mind. And in many cases, he has a real choice between two or more ways of speaking, that is, betweon ...

A DRAMATIC SITUATION

... By this tiune poor Will Laiuptoi was quite gone. HiE eyes wore open and lie rolled about his head, but he couls no longer speak. Now the two rooms on tbe ground-floor had, in their earlier and more honourable days, beeu cosissecled by foiding-doore, which ...

LITERATURE

... We have only come up in order-to taste fruit from Galilee. Josephus speaks of tile country in perfectly rapturous terms. He counts no fewer than 240 towns and villages, and speaks of the smallest as con- taining not less than 16.000 inhabitants I This ...

LEEDS MUSICAL FESTIVAL

... those who have had eany 1030heied* nuail experience stand wonderingly beforei arallel sinci Handel's Oratorio breoame; 6o to :speak, allied to the religions fiith, as well as connected with the artistic life, of .Oour, ountry,? We think not. All the greater ...

LEEDS MUSICAL FESTIVAL

... distinguished it from begin- ning to end. All that had been predicated of the Leeds chorus was fully carried out. But to speak in gene. ral terms-from the opening of the impressive and masterly orchestral interlude, separating the prophecy of the three ...

LITERATURE

... stopped him a en signing pulpers of mere form. You may as well 8ay that I am not to blovt ray nose or to take snuff while yen speak. On this orca-.n the laugh was against Sir Edmund, But on other occasions the laugh was all on his side. Sugden hated Brougham ...

LITERATURE

... forgetfulness in others' good, may obtain the real com- uiand of such a one. But the persuaaive force with which the right speaks to him is beyond all istellectual measure; it stirs him in depths he cannot reach; its heat is in excess of its light; it ...

THE FASHIONS FOR NOVEMBER

... sleeve. For many dressmakers it is a delicate question, comprising many dilliculties; the style of sleeve cannot, properly speaking, be determined upon until the dress is nearly finished; then, and then only, can one arrive at a right conclusion as to the ...

GOING IN FOR TEMPERANCE

... euggdetbd that his oldeft sdri aid eves been in any danger of becoming ai dfirkril. Bu to: Mf. Crnpp they did not hesitate to speak freely. rnpp ovned no ieft- gages, no total abistalers owed him money besides, he not only was not a ohurch-member bnt he had ...

LITERATURE

... from 1coward's castle, o because his congregation had no right of reply ; but I, against this he urges that a6 man who speaks clearly his I1 views from the pulpit doss it at a much greater risk to 's himself then any anonymous writer in the papers ...

LITERATURE

... teach it. Both before and aftor the struggle of11848 the ?? Church made itself eutirely obstructive to all Liberal progress. Speaking broadly, the clergy belong to a lower social olass than with 'ft. whether in or out of the Church; of England. They owe ...