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THE THEATRES

... friendly rivalry that bas long existed between the Court Tiaeatre uti the Prince of Walee's will at once be brought, so to speak, to closer quartere, ao doubt to the gain of playgoers, and also, it is to be hoped, to the advutagv of these ladies and gentleniea ...

THE INTERNATIONAL AGRICULTURAL EXHIBITION

... pass quickly from one end of the e Show to the other. Of the value, from an agricul- v tural point of viesw, we shall have to speak in a later letter. The labours of the judges commenced at nine T o'clock, and were continued to a late hour in the after. cV ...

THE INTERNATIONAL AGRICULTURAL EXHIBITION

... the life, gaiety, s and interest of these occasions, were conspicuous by their absence. The collection of horses, whether we speak of the te agricultural, hunter, carriage, or hackney Clashes, is id remarkably fine. Class 1, which brings out in strong d ...

LITERARY AND ART GOSSIP

... fashioms of tie hirlbit arnd :h languaoge of the plaee. As for rho langirage I presumre mm Ic sione are ignioranrt tribit threu speak gool I;read. Aird as n sn for the habit of thu sers, they stliter not learn us, and tio o I vornen little.r heir merirt in ...

LITERATURE

... not netglect to write to sue, for your o ers kisljeees isoeo h laue f soy life, which I shbould at i'7r, be sorry to lose. Speaking pessonially to Bdosewll in thle ti ia-u iectusnim of the same year, in Dr. Taylor's garden, at Ash- tu ,,ii beornoc, Jehnoeur ...

Poetry

... their play; Mst Watches-with the stalrs above her- C Tlil the day. Tbrough all seasons' varied phases, ra Still tile swaters speak their praises lal Oi tbe lPowver that sweeps them onward, in their fulness to the 6 r deep ; (B All their rush and tumnult ...

Literature

... 1EXPlOTRtion In flaunts of Vice :- There ta no manl who Is mere indebted to the newspaper PreSS than I am. My business is to speak tile truth, land the wider the audience Itie newspaper press gives me, the wolder my field Is. As the secular And re tgtous ...

FEMININE FASHIONS AND FANCIES

... his young friends of the family, who are devoted to him. Du Maurier and his dog are inseparable-his eye brightens when he speaks of him, and when he told me that no dog in England could match Chang for beauty and gentleness, I knew that he believed ...

A STREET ARAB'S GRATITUDE

... sbart in amazement and turn as white as a sheet in the face. My Lord, one word, I pray, before the prisoner is allowed to speak, cried the excited young lady. There has been a mistake, and the wrong man has been arrested-tbat is not the criminal ! ...

THE JULY MAGAZINES

... sound, that thereby stuns him, so that, like Hallet, he is bechilled Almost to jolly by the set of fenr, Sitinds dumb lian speaks not.'' he is for the moment in the same state as the man wvho first tries to smoke tobacco, and -vimo, with pallid face, cold ...

Art and Literature

... farmers' wives used to assemble for sly tea-drinkings when their husbands had gone to market. As late as 1Si8 an Irish farmer, speaking cf Irish servant girls, said to me: They ask for their tav. If their misthresses had drunk tay thirty years ago they'd have ...

VARIETIES

... lady unlike a mirror ? She gave it up. 1Be. causo.esaid 11cc rude fellow, 1a mirror reflects without o epsahg;in alady speaks without reflecting.1 Very Dot od said eabn. Now answer me., Why is a man un- lk'amro I cannot tell you.,, Because the ...