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POETRY

... Ago is wisdom :-ThikioTm Spea'k in rime ! don't lingcr, pausing on the brink; Be your purpose worthy-utter what you think. sometimes a word Nvill saive, thon sileuce is a crime- The best tboughts lack atuse k ept secret :-Speak in Time! Act in Time I reflect ...

LETTER CCXXV. I

... said to enjoy freedom of speech when he is at liberty to speak out his mind Ly, without fear of consequences; he may also he be said to enjoy freedom of speech when he is k, at liberty to speak as long and as often nas he pleases. Clearly these are different ...

MISS ANDERSON AT THE ALEXANDRA THEATRE

... despite its very apparent inequalities, is a performance of higher interest than either. This fact affords us a reason for speaking at the outset of Mr. W. S. Gilbert's one-act drama 'Comedy and Tragedy, which last night at the Alexandra Theatre followed ...

POETRY

... Nor moraliso with his despair, The man is down and his great need Is ready help, not prayer and creed. Give like a christian-speak indeed, A noble life is the best of erced, And he shall wear a Royal orowv Who gives a lift when one is down. Tlhe world is ...

LITERARY NOTICES

... have seen many similar volumes, but none so-complete, l - and therefore so truly representative, as this. 3- While we might speak highly of the original s n pieces introduced for the first time from the o s publisher's own copyrights, what pleases us v ...

POETRY

... darkness round it thicken, Time, thy uame. Nay. but rest is bhrn of fne for healing, -Se might aeily Time, with voic roprest, Speak: is grief the ?? gift of my draleig ' Nay, bat rest. All tho world is weari je, east and west, Tived wvith toil to wvatch the ...

EXHIBITON AWARDS

... about the juries not speaking out on the subject of the awards. Prom what follows, you will see why we have not spoken before, We enclose copy of a letter addressed to Mr. Clarke Aspinall as charman of the Jury Committeo That letter speaks for itself. For-obvions ...

MR. STOLL'S CONCERT

... and two songs by Mora, viz., sThe Fairy Castle and 'Not Married Yet Of Madame Patey and Mr. Fo~i it is not necessary to speak, so familiar is everybody with the voice and style of each of these popular artists. Their songs were chosen chiefly from among ...

POETRY

... stouo, 'Neath thle hnzel bushles; Sieginlg when it'S all alone, Stoeling through the rushee, Happy as the day is leng, Never speaking but in song. Singing at thle Morning's dawn, Whein the day is breaking: Sitging when the light's withdrawn, Anwl the starsare ...

POETRY

... bright cionds answered- We depart, We vanish from the sky; Ask what is deathless itn thy heart, For that which cannot die. Speak then, thou voice of God within, Thou ot the deep, low toue ! Answer roe, through life's restless din, Where is the spirit flown ...

ALEXANDRA THEATRE

... of an imag- Vl Ration which was fed by the hardships of a we voyage from ?? to London. Wagner may BE despise Rienzi, and speak coldly of The cn lying Dutchman, but these are works whose 13n popular elements must awake a spirit of inquiry an: which ...

MUSICAL NOTES

... Mackenzie's Colomba, Goring Thomas's Esmeralda, Sir G. A. Maefarren's King David, and Stainer's St. Mary Magdalene. Speaking of Dvorak's setting of the fine old Latin hymn, it is to be hoped that either the Liverpool Philharmonic Society or the Liver- ...