MAGAZINES FOR JANUARY

... nothing but a moral sofa. This is her Univ I simile for the sense and trust of God. But I can tell her that the loss she speaks of is indeed a loss, not only of spiritual cokes and ale, but of food and )rth drink-and of food and drink without which ...

Literature

... paper on 1Ireland and Engaland;' by an MI.P., exposes the absurdity of the claims pat forward by the ranting Irishmen wvho speak in the name of their country. Professor Baynes gies a ?? paper onl Wh'lat Shakespeare~ learnit at Scool. M~r. Glastone in ...

LITERATURE

... the modern Ritualists, who claim to have b that Priesthood which Roman Catliolics arid the Oriental Churches, generally speaking, have,' and to have o received by their orders sacramnental graice, endowvilng th cns with supernatural powers and enabling ...

THEATRICAL MEMS

... 'Pinafore' expression viva a noosance, remarked a' T'utonic gentleman to a genial coadjutor. Auf you tole a yeler sometiogs, he speaks nodding von blame Asiglish abetr he say-'Vot, hardly, sometimes nefer!' Vot hind of hlngutge is ?? last few nights of Drink ...

[ill]

... to remember e that there are two distinct classes of facts with I which we are dealing, there will be no great ' harm in speaking of them together, and by the s aid of the same words. This is the mistake I which vitiates the reasoning of the whole. No ...

BELFAST MONTHLY FAIR

... were a good many present, picked up all of this class worthy of shipment In the agricultural section there was, numerically speaking, a good show, but many of them were of an Inferior character, and had to all appearances seen better days. Anything suitable ...

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 ...

LITERATURE

... Mr Matthew Browne contributes a well-written high review of The Letters of the late Mr Dickens. acter One might as well speak of Mr Shakespeare ase lp of call Dickens anything but Charles Dickens. But this slip of the pen in the title of his paper ...

Magazines

... intricate for any outline of it we could attempt. We will but add here that Mr. Mallock now tells the Positivists that when they speak of virtue and morality they mean, and can only mean, some form of happiness, of pleasure, and how is it to be decided ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... progress. Indeed it appears at first sight rather to belong to the latter than to the Prin- ciples of Morality. Mr. Spencer speaks here rather of the development of the moral feelings than of their objec- tive rationality. And careful students of evolution ...

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 ...

MUSIC

... who has already earned distinction as a member of Mr. Mapieson's Italian company. About the others it will be time enough to speak when they successively appear. Every amateur will be glad to welcome again the charming Miss Julia Gaylord, who is making such ...