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THE VOICE IN SPEAKING AND SINGING

... THE VOICE IN SPEAKING AND SINGING. TnE second of the series of lectures in connectior with the Ladies' Collegiate School was delivered it Ist night in presence of a large audience by 1r,. i Walter Buck, Professor of Singing and Vocat r Physiolo,,. ...

THE IRISH LANGUAGE

... yezar since, Mr. John Fleming ac- )centuated the fact that in Irish-speAking districts the results fees earned for teachers by pupils are c.ensiderably higher than those in English-speak- ing. He gave in detail the statistics which bore out his contention ...

A PORTRAIT OF THE POPE

... temples. His cassock seems'to envelop only the ?? of a body, just enough~humanity to hold a soul. -He speaks very slowly, particularly whenf he speaks in French. In Italian he Improvises withrapidity, but in French he has to call on his memory, which is ...

THE IRISH LANGUAGE

... present, because when their grandfathers were going'to school the speaking ot it wars made penal. The boys sad girls wore what was called a tally round their necks, and if they were known to speak a word of Irisbh a nick was put in the tally, which was made ...

EXTRACTS FROM JUDY

... his reply, in good faith given, Our chief has from his post been driven, And, in the face of earth and heaven, Such actions speak dishonesty I Outr Yankee friends should wiser grow Than strike one who was not their foa No madder act could raise a glow In ...

THE GAIETY THEATRE.—MARITANA

... realise any other Filina but here, so it must -be difficult, to imagine a Maritarn who meets the ideal she has created.- To speak ef her delightful vocalism and charm- ingly graceful acting were a tempting theme, but, after all, no one in Dublin need be ...

THEATRE ROYAL-- FEDORA

... which every scene is worked ont, incident hanging upon incident, and yet without any clumsy coincidence, it is impossible to speak in too extravagant terms. If only M, Sardou's dialogue could be accurately reproduced the play would fall short in no respect ...

THE DRAMA IN LONDON

... entertainer, and your own name appears in letters not unlike those 'which stand' below a Roman bust. With such -6 pllaque so to speak, I was bidden some diays ago to come to a recep- tion given by Xr. Woolcome an American, to Mr. Winch, another child of the ...

NOVELTIES

... are easy to sew on, an eye being made at the back. Whbile mtent~ioning the froaks of fashion, it may Dot be out of place to speak of thre new clasps for closings riding habits to be worn at a hunts thesie are of small ivory hoofs, with gold nails, caught ...

MISS ADELINE STANHOPE AT THE NEW THEATRE ROYAL

... acy of the House were afflictedwith obscure vision, He complained, amid loud protestations from the Left, that people should speak with so little re- -spect for the King. The rescript, he said, was entirely justifiable, and its legality was not shaken by ...

THE MUSICAL SEASON

... gifts. -, There is to -be another lady violinist, MdUe Anna Lang, from Stockholm. M Hoilman, violonceflist, will, if report speaks truly,, vindicate his own powers and the cipabilities o'of -his instrument with: the highest efficiency An eminent Dublin ...

THE GAIETY THEATRE

... Arnbhei, and Mr. Snazelle adinirakle as Devilehoof. Miss Josephine Yorko was the Queen of the Gipsies. The opera was, generally speaking, well given, and told on the audionce, who ooored several items heartily, hrmongstth rest,I dreamt that I dwelt nd The ...