DEAF AND DUMB SPEECH

... acquire language, and is dumb. A child of six years of age who speaks French is removed to England, where it hears no other language than English, and in the course of six months it will speak English with the same facility with which it previously spoke ...

DEAF AND DUMB SPEECH.*

... acqluire language, and is dumb. A child of six years of age who speaks French is removed to England, where it hears no other language than English, and in the course of six months it will speak English with the same facility with which it previously sp oke ...

FREEMAN'S ENGLISH TOWNS AND DISTRICTS

... the lords of the woild themselves. I speak not of Venice or Florence, of Trier or of Ravenna. I speak of cities of a class one degree lower. I speak of the last home of Carolingian kingship on the rock of Laon. I speak of the walls of successive ages spreading ...

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 ...

PALLAS

... swutcr knowledge testilio3. 'The blush vour lace that beautifies lelin:,isn elequence outeies, It Nvhispcrs hat you cannot speak', Doar Girton girl. Dncafh the blue 1-ymettan skies, 'Atc ?? that sob when daylight dies Are honey swret, yNII say, but bleak ...

SCHOOL OF DRAMATIC ART

... art of speaking well, and might be subdivided into conviction, per- seasion, style, and delivery. It was with the last of these sub- divisions, delivery or elocution, that they had to deal. Elocution he defined as the art of reading and speaking distinctly ...

Published: Saturday 14 October 1882
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 658 | Page: 4 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

IN THE ALSATIAN MOUNTAINS

... and Alsace are concerned. But why make the fact patent in print? The tone of the work, too, is very disagreeable. Mrs. Lee speaks of her dislike for ' thc conceited, domineering Teutons, of the huddled-up Belgians, a ' loose and shambling maidservant ...

THE AUGUST NUMBER OF THE NATIONAL MAGAZINE

... defer speaking for the present. hirs. Jell netto Fothergili's verses to' Sconehenge.-which follow, are excellent, both in form and colour. The stipendisry magistrate for Swansea, Mr. 3. 0. Fowler, comes next with an admirable paper oc **Speaking and Preaching ...

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 ...

THE WATCHERS

... the night, Her breathing soft and low, As in her breast the wave of life Kept heaving to and fro. So silently we seemed to speak, So slowly moved about, As we had lent her half our powers To eke her living out, Our very hopes belied our fears, Our fears ...

NOTREDAME AT THE THEATRE ROYAL, CARDIFF

... placed on the Cordiff strage on Monday night, as tie tastes of the dress circlveere T presumably consulted last week. Let us speak X first of that which was undoubtedly the most on- | joyable part of the evening's entertainment-the scenery. Thishas been ...

SEASIDE VOICES

... SEASIDE VOICES. speak to our stornm-worn hearts, 0 restless oce,, bhen the bright niorning stilis your fierce C.MM.ion, Aol surges break iD M-usic On tbe etrand. Tell n' the peace that shall lif&b tulnult follow, Becaase its depths are oreasured in the ...