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POETRY

... follow, 3eeaaue its depths are measured in the hollow Of God's almighty hand. When on your wavee the golden noon rejoices, Speak to our souls, and with your myriad voices A~nswer their yearnings, inuinite a~nd fond, And make a bridge of' light, when day ...

LITERARY ANECDOTES

... persevere,' said Tasso, ' his rancour gives me no pain. How much better is it that he should speak ill of me to all the world than that all the world should speak Ill of me to him.' A printer in Paris wrote a tragedy called 'Joshua,' which he printed in ...

POETRY

... curly head; A little workman, spade in band; A little footprint on the sand A tremulous star, a wavering flute. Two souls that speak, though lips are mute, Two touching faces fixed above, Two kindred spirits, one through love. A little cloudlet in the sky ...

POETRY

... Ivy. Would we call her back again to the anguish andl the pain ? Nay, wewill not be so weak, For that grave of peace doth speak Under the ivy.- The world's sorrows all foregone, Happy, happy little one i Hidden from the bitter strife, The deep woe of ...

POETRY

... drop a tear, And homeward go The anguish of an unshared grief to -know; Darling, which one! One of us, dear- But one- Shall speak glad words the other cannot hear; And fully know All we have dimly groped for here below. Darling, which one! One of us, darling ...

BRADFORD ART MUSEUM

... feet,- he threw dowu bi 3 whip and severely ?? his asalant, a farmer. MU. Parnel is expected to speak at the Dublirt Convention on the 30th inst., and will speak at several - meetings in Ireland in the fist and seoond weeks of January. - M .'Davitt , left£hi ...

POETRY

... the rest, Plucked it very tenderly, Laid it on the sick man's breast. The deft hand hung uselessly, The voice would never speak again, But she read the grateful eyes, And knew her guess was not in vain, For a moment satisfied Was the look; then slowly ...

ROYAL ACADEMY OF MUSIC

... which had been made in the build- ings in the holidays, and to the increased advantages thus afforded to the students. In speaking of the absolute necessity for the particular study of music of having a musical oar, he expressed his belief from personal ...

CLIPPINGS FROM THE COMIC PAPERS

... CLIPPINGS FROM THE COMIC PAPERS. I (From Punch.) 'SANiITAS BANITATDM.' 'The angel of death is, so to speak, hovering over a doomed land, and he descends on those spots which are the ?? Richard Temple's Address at the Social Science Congress. The Angel ...

LITERARY EXTRACTS

... gossip both grown-up people and children are much too fond. Somehow or other it seems pleasanter to speak unkindly of our friends than it does to speak well of them. Why is this? I cannot tell you. 'Ill news flies fast'-much faster than good new's-and ...

POETRY

... streamers, the masts 'by the board I' The sea o'er the deocks of the good ship is breaking; They segnal I Distress ?? the crew speaks not a word. Y'heave.ho. with a will, lads,' the good skipper cried, 'The life.boat rides bravely the crest of the tide.' 3Right ...

THE BISHOP OF RIPON ON NOVELS

... novels which he d ribe with a -great deal of 'accuracy as prose tho did not wish to liit himselt to them a~lthoug he should speak of them. What was in his mind was simply the reflection of the enormous force which the novel had become in modern lifo. Hie ...