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Pall Mall Gazette

LESSONS FOR 1879.*

... fair exponent of the Republican creed. She is, at all events, an eloquent, a clear, and an impartial narrator; and her facts speaks for themselves. In an admirable postscript to the reader Mdme. ?? says, virtually: - Following the advice of the old moralist ...

THE GROSVENOR GALLERY

... 787 drawings in one gallery? As to the general multitude, it will no doubt for a time eat its caviare with a good grace, and speak of Mantegna, Bellini, and Sandro Botticelli with the reverence due to those great names. But no affectation of esthetic: p ...

NEW BOOKS AND NEW EDITIONS

... hour. Twilight veils with. kindly grace Blushes burning on the cheek, When the timid upturned face Coyly answers eyes that speak; Lip meets lip, its troth to plight; Rapture, then, is love's sweet dowcr; Then, when day is kissing night, Is the lovers' ...

NEW BOOKS AND NEW EDITIONS

... mecting night, hlushes burning on the chec! Is the lovers hour.When the timid upturned (ace is te ri ?? answers eyes that speak Gloaming is the t Lsting time Iip meets lip, its troth to plight Hardest outlines soften then; Rapture, then, is love's sweet ...

THE GROSVENOR GALLERY

... 787 drawings in one gallery? As to the general multitude, it will no doubt for a time eat its caviare with a good grace, and speak of Mantegna, Bellini, and Sandro Botticelli with the reverence due to those great names. But no affectation of oesthetic p ...

BURKE'S PEERAGE AND BARONETAGE.*

... English baronies of Moowbray and Segrave have been revived in favour of Lord Stourton. Of course it is obvious that, strictly speaking, the earldom of Cairns is as much a new peerage as either the viscounty of Cranbrook or the barony of Norton. But since it ...

ON FOOT IN SPAIN.*

... as he went his way he relieved himself by strong language. Like I.crd Bateman's mother-in-law, he had never been heard to speak so free, and his Spanish dog, Juan, was so impressed by the force ot the English expletives that he tucked his tail between ...

MRS. CARDIGAN.*

... anything at all, in fact, to keep them from scampering through the pages until they have run into Mrs. Cardigan's secret, or, to speak more correctly, into the writer's own secret, which is concealed for a while f from Mrs. Cardigan herself. A keen-scented reader ...

THE OLD MASTERS AT THE ACADEMY

... to- the value of the title. The latter advantage also may to some extent be- claimed for Gainsborough's boy. He is strictly speaking red and white rather than pink; but besides this there is really little to recommend him. He is a languid youth in a fancy ...

WILLIAM HARVEY

... busy,, useful, and untarnished life, had an easy passport, and is not forgotten. The good he did lives after him; all men speak well of him, and his last: biographer is not the worst. Dr. Willis says it is not a little extraordinary that up to the present ...

WILLIAM HARVEY.*

... Lk useful, and untarnished life, had an easy passport, and is not forgotten. n The good he did lives after him; all men speak well of him, and his last is biographer is not the worst. ly Dr. Willis says it is not a little extraordinary that up to the ...

THE WISH OF HIS LIFE.*

... unscrupulous steward. a The idea, accordingly makes rapid progress: the son and heir of Baror, Adhemar finds himself, pecuniarily speaking and so far as the estates t of Saligneux are concerned, at the mercy of Jean Teterol, the sometime a kicked and insulted ...