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Hampshire, England

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736

Type

736

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LITERARY NOTICES

... cannot accept at second hand such a framework of times and seasons y wherein to set our lives, and who feel that God alone, n speaking in our hearts, and not the lips of any priest, Pt must tell us when to rejoice and when to be sorrowful. is It will be seen ...

LITERARY NOTICES

... gifts which we bestowed on our unhappy possession (Ire- of land) was the English system of owning land, Land, pro- iat perly speaking, cannot be owned by any man. It belongs ry to all the human race. Laws have to be made to secure n- the profits of their ...

THEATRICAL GOSSIP

... Scarborough u pa are d lrm ostreiady. Theya r ercted from is plans prepared by Mt-sars Verity and li-int, andi that fact to speaks volumes in their favouir; to awhen all is done in wt,0001. will have been eapniled. Everyone who knows to anythinug about ...

LITERARY NOTICES

... pbilb~sophobr, much less the guide and instructora joh of mankind; but in his suppressed and parsimonions j way, with no life to speak of, he was neither an ignoble nor no an unlovable m~an. Another prominent paper is by Mr-J.C. h, oer, McCoanl, on Irish Land ...

PORTSMOUTH SOHOOL OF SCIENCE AND ART

... results. The Naval Architectural s aud Clas 0 cotrbuted some admirably executed Drawings of se] r diiffernt subjects, which speak well for the talents of the be students. Nolt a' little of the success of this year's. be exhibition oan be attributed to the ...

CATTLE SHOW AT BOTLEY

... daring tnh 31e theesoming summer. The Couservatjves could rest pretty au he sure that they would not joatle each other much. Speak- rag i of the Midlothian election, in which his brother was P dn dieeated by Mr. Gladstone, he said that what struck him VI ...

PORTSMOUTH LITERARY AND SCIENTIFIC SOCIETY

... in that town. Breathing t the screner atmosphere of science and literature, men were tanght to restraam themselves and to speak as man to man, and to himself it was a matter of joy on looking back at his attendance there. (Hear, hear.) E Mr. J. READ moved ...

THE MAY MAGAZINES

... n poetry he defines as poetry written by Aknglo-Indians, and deriving its inspiration from Indian surroundings. Strictly speaking, there is no school of Anglo-Indian poets, but the writer is of opinion that, judginig from such verses as Mr. Edwin Arnold's ...

FLOWER SHOW AT GOSPORT

... the same time indisputable, fact that the weatlher, as a rule, has been dead against the Show. It has become a by-word when speaking of heavy rains j in the early summer months to cbaracteriso them ast flower sbow weather, andl it has not unfrrquently ...

THE ANNALS OF PORTSMOUTH.*

... wae t.his Gibson who behaved so roughly to r.fr Caorter,- grandfather of Sir John Carter, some years afrter the time we are speaking of. Mr. Carter being in the Royal Elxchange, London, was a spectator of the proclamation of Geore the irs, he finished his ...

COTTAGER'S SHOW AT NORTH END

... G. E. Kent and the gentlemen who constituted the committee, and who took such an interest in North End, which from a so-to-speak simple hamlet had risen to be a very important suburb of the borough. (Applause,) -The Vic (the Rev. S. Lidbetter), in thanking ...

AMATEUR THEATRICALS AT THE PORTLAND HALL

... contrary, I - a keenly observant eye, a sound judgment, and a firm a will. In the second act, however, Captain Everitt, eoto 11 speak, cast his skin, and in the succeeding passages in- vested the part with the vigorous interest which attaches a to it. As Captain ...