THE SECRETARY SPEAKS
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... eleven in the evening should be the hours during which plain speaking should have the rule in every Temple of Thespis where his votaries are collected. Hamlet may tell the players to speak tie speech trippingly on the tongue, but the value of such a rendition ...
... THE SECRETARY SPEAKS. Tantollowing nir anesutan.ea, drawn from tho personal ?? of Mr. ?? Whick, of the Borough Arms, Dadley Street, Wedneabary, are 0o important amd really remarkable that they cannot help but be of intereet ead value to all readee ...
... of Lords; Sir Richard Cross has given notice that he proposes to omit it, and omitted it will be unless the country speaks out, and speaks at once. The fourth and last point is that, while no fresh arbitrary power in any shape or form shall be given to ...
... WHO SPEAKS FIRST? I.N Newton first lighted on the idea of gravitation, we are told that he r olce sought to explain by means of it the motions of the moon. But S his time the dimensions of the earth were imperfectly known, and the *ta at his hand did ...
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... yR. BRIGHT SPEAKING OUT. Before Mr. Gladstone went to South Wales, bevwas urged to speak out by some of his own loval followers, who are shrewd enough to see that, unless the breach in the party is healed, its banishment from power will be protracted ...
... Future of the Eigisb4, ,t speaking loces. Such an attempt to fore. i cast the progress of events is, in the mind of tle 11 great Englishman, the necessary consertnce of d the extraordinary development of the English. a speaking peoples during the last ...
... MARK TWAIN SPEAKS OF WOMEN. The following is the text of Ir Clemens's reply to the toast, Womasi-God bleas her, at the New England supper at New York recently:- The toast includes the sex, universally-it is to women, comprehensively wheresoever she ...
... an article by Mr. GLADSTONE, W which appears in The Xineteeftd Centugy for July. Some weelm ago, Mr. GLADSTONE says, when speaking in the House of Commons on some question of Irish policy, he had occasion to refer to the nature of the transactions by which ...
... as hope understanding, in the future near and far, aisong English-speaking peoples, though it may not be matter of certainty, yet is beyond the necessity of going a begging, so to speak, for recommendations frons aisy individual, earnestly and with my ...