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NEW YEAR'S EVEIN LIVERPOOL

... about noisily and aimnies6ly, but pithel jovially, fill about one o'citok, when nil wis quiet. There Wes no drunhenners to speak of, and the only indication of the passing of friendly bottIles was the noise of their ?? ocrasionafly,a3 they were fung ...

MAGAZINES FOR JANUFARY

... beauty of ferns exists, is now being published in one shilling monthly parts. Of the literary merits of the work wve need not speak, for they have long since been recognised in the highest critical quarters; and it is but just to say that they are no less ...

Art and Literary Gossip

... has availed himself, and among which Ris- pert's general map of Turkey occupies the foremost Plaee, Signor de Gubernatis -speaks in the highest terms of the Austrian charts, but says with reference to the English ones that the one published in 1824 is ...

THE WORLD WELL LOST

... andslw admired Derwent, though he was so standoffieb siml treatod her as if she had been Catskins and not grloel enough to speak to. Also she had a very friondly feelilI for Arthur, of whom she would have been considerally fonder and not nearly so much ...

LARRY LOHENGRIN

... 'Tent to Southport yesterday afternoon, and 0(ecck0, would not be at the office before eleven ,h¢e All 0COmes say I want to speak to him. 15ht si. hi. fl sue w5 l 0 later Peter presented himself to his partner. It iepg 0lldj~Oat spirits and utterly u ...

VARIETIES

... Sir Chlarles, re have taken a standard. The General looked at him, but traio no reply, and turn- i log round, boglen speaking to some one else ; upon which I the engineer. ttiillking tlint be bad not been heard, repeated, Sir ChWrles, we have taken ...

LITERARY SELECTIONS

... him in 1812, seems, lalthough it does ndt specify any number, to indicate a greater total than this. Stewart Nroe, in 1817, speaks of him reading twenty languages and conversing in eighteen. Baron Von Zack, in 1820, brings the number of the languages ...

LIVERARY NOTICES

... Society in the chajterhouse of St. Paul's Cathedral. and con- taminlg some sensible hints and good stories on readi~g and speaking from a laymtan's poinr of view.' There is only too much truth in a sentence like this, in which the honlourable member ...

LITERARY SELECTIONS

... language extremely obscure. Until the remantic school of 1830 tore some swaddling-clothes from France, no French author dared speak of a cab except as a numbered chariot, or of the ocean, except as 1the bitter liquid ?? plain. In a French translation ...

VARIETIES

... secho, retosrted a member, amid a yell of delight. The American newspaper is a free-end-eesy institution. A certain journal, speaking of Mr. A., who had received a,~ appointment us postmaseter, remarised with saee freisl, 1If he attends to the mails as welleas ...

CONSERVATIVE DEMONSTRATION IN HENGLER'S CIRCUS

... hear.) The remedy I Should propose is this-I sin speaking of course as ?? i-'rividuals; I am speaking even without coo- 'ni>toion with Many of my friends with whom I likd ike to consult: but I am speaking as ?? wih has at heart the well-being of his country ...

VARIETIES

... cets in bitter cold to those tfnished with handsome fura than to those not so fortunate. The Cincinsnati Commercial, in speaking of an orator, observes that he spoke an hour and a half, and was sen. sible to the last. The man who gets the maddest ...