LITERATURE

... 187 so long tis any hook of prayer, even the Prayer Book -sul itself, is your only way of speaking to God. Never rest e itill the habit is formed of speaking to God in, your owTI tain words. The book has reached its 38th thousand, and upa seems to us ...

LIVES OF THE LORDS STRANGFORD

... sisters, upon myself. . . It was in this situation, weighed down by a sense of all the mischief I had done, that I tried to speak. I broke down signally and miserably, my nerves going with a sort of crash. What a position! I might have recovered myself ...

LITERATURE

... properly Pall rs. looked after from the moment heleavesbhis native ishore till hold he arrives at his final destination. Speaking of the emigrant robe, rt lunatic asylumns, 'the writer says':-4 Probably th 6 great de-no in pression of trade during the ...

LITERATURE

... did not personally know him at all. He replied 'Y ou must, for I heard him say that you gave him his first lesson in public speak- ing.' I went to a subsequent meeting and recognised the young 'Friend' of 1832. The advice seems to have taken root in Mr ...

MISS MISANTHROPE

... For a painter of contemporary manners such qualities are as invaluable as they are rare. Mr. McCarthy's subject is, broadly speaking, modern society; but the ordinary paraphernalia of the so-called society novel, the balls, the dinners, with detailed bills ...

LITERARY NOTICES

... under thle conviction that to do so would dinturb their theory. These diffev. ottes toay he briefly stated as three. Man can speak;I he can make improvements in his own condition, to which it is difficult to set limits ; andt he can worship. Dr. Blateman ...

THEATRES

... he fails to indicate that redeeming good feeling which Mr. Coghlan rendered so effective. Of the Moses of Mr. Odell we can speak in the highest terms. Mr. Forrester's Joseph Surface has none of the subtle insidious fascination, though it has all the h ...

Published: Saturday 05 January 1878
Newspaper: Graphic
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1093 | Page: 8 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

THE LONDON MUSIC HALLS

... written by Mr G. V. Keast and Mir Vance, and called Fair Rosamond; or, the King, the Queen, and the Donce to Pay, in which she speaks the lines allotted her with telling effect, and makes a decided hit by her pleasant -shall we say saucy 9 - interpretation ...

Published: Sunday 06 January 1878
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 3280 | Page: 7 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

LITERATURE

... fairly in- terestitng, and Americans at home are aptly described by Catherine Ropley. Flee Portrait (cart 15) contains a speaking like- ness, as the phrase runs, of Arthur Sullivan, which is apropos at the present moment when the Sorcerer i 5 I i I i ...

PROVINCIAL THEATRICALS

... of actiig, too, is the Quashybungo of Mr Sn-.ith. Mbiso Eva Ross-Church as Lotus, the Spirit of the Roses, plays well, and speaks the lines intrusted to her very pretthly; and Milss Talbot as the Spirit of Evil plays ahd looks capitally. MiiSS Kate Mandlebert ...

Published: Sunday 06 January 1878
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 24665 | Page: 6 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

LITERATURE

... with its: misty moonights and legend- Laden crags and towers; and at that New World across the waters where another English.speaking people,bbound to ourselves by a thousand ties. of ?? com MaunitY of interest, find that life under an American.I President ...