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Leeds Mercury

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Yorkshire and the Humber, England

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Leeds Mercury

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 ...

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 ...

LITERATURE

... t' stalks liggin. Hooivver, ah'lI seean fettle 'em. There may be persons in the North Riding, the scene of the story, who speak in this cacophonous, uncouth manner; but it has not yet been our fortune to bear them. It would, perhaps, matter little if ...

LITERARY AND ART GOSSIP

... is turned fa$ter or Blower. To attain ?? result there mupl, be a way of driving'the cyliyder, while dehverhsg the 5oupd or speaking, at eyactly tie same rate as it ran ?? the sogm.lsX were being recprdeiei, aud this u is perhaps best done by ArV z-segulgted ...

LITERATURE

... etching is the first of a series intended c to illustrate Hamerton's well-known volume, Etching c and Etchers. We can hardly speak too highly of its e beauty. As an example of composition it is almost r perfect. The grouping of the trees is striking, not ...

EXTRACTS FROM THIS WEEK'S PUNCH

... watchful England's a'ertaxed ears of late, Something,, at length, their empty noise abate LIen he, the Sphinux oracular, ?? speak i'lain words at lust. From weary week to week 'l'he Snacion, sore perplext to mate its choice Between the ?? forward and the ...

LITERATURE

... the gentlemen who have f urnished the Dael cii vws (1) the with its -accounts of the present war. There is no need MaQ to speak of the vast seevices which. our contemporary has W5 rendered during the progress of the campaign. In BU cosmmon-with all other ...

MUSIC IN ELEMENTARY SCHOOLS

... suggests a remedy, W which suggestion, coming from one whose long and well- nL earned experience has gained for him the right to speak o I and to he heard, should not be passed over in silence, but in should receive the attention and consideration it -de- in ...

LITERATURE

... treats with great earnest- sty! ness and beauty, utterly repudiating the limitation some aido would impose on Christ, though Speaking of them with a mu generosity we are hound to note-the more soe as we have Gus her previously indicated passages where we ...

LITERATURE

... above 04iv hims, crowning 1Suniumi's marble, Steep, the celebrated T, temple of lIdinerva, which formedthe outmost, so to speak,. yearf of Athenbiunidolatry. Standing on the iost'rem~bte -pro.; seen monotory of Attica, it declared to every aid who- a ...

LITERATURE

... When~-the Arama comes to be reguilated by literature it becomes at branch of that art, and we may then, but not till then, - speak of a dramatic literature. The laws of dramatic action-unity, completeness, and 'probability-are ex- plained and illustrated ...

LITERATURE

... a wavy mass of agitated back hair, d his real impotence is not made manifest to the audience n as it would be it he had to speak, sing, or play; and this - in reality furnishes a sort of haven of safety for all who either rush into this position hrom motives ...