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Pall Mall Gazette

SHAIRP'S LECTURES ON POETRY.*

... utters comes not from a special faculty, but from his total self; his speech is the declaration of his inward life; and he speaks of poetry because poetry has nourished his deepest thoughts and feelings, bringing down living water from some high a&ial ...

THE PALL MALL LIST OF ENTERTAINMENTS

... PALL MALL GAZETTE), Will be REDUCED from SIXPENCE to THREE PENCE, and issued in a Coloured Wrapper, stitched. The SPECTATOR, speaking of the PALL MALL GAZETTE, says.-- It has been made under its present management dislindt-ly the most readable paper in England ...

NEW BOOKS AND NEW EDITIONS

... noticeable fact is that authors' interests are less con- sidered in the United States than in any other civilized country (we speak of native authors), and that the English law is less favourable to them than the law of any other European country. Our Captain ...

THE POETRY OF BYRON.*

... best and strongest work in one body together ? Mr. Arnold thinks that, thus mnutilated-or, as Lord Salisbury would say, in speaking of the Turkish Emipire, consolidated -Byron will have a better chance of L-eing appreciated by this generation. What a ...

MEMOIRS OF COUNT MIOT DE MELITO.*

... remarks about worrying the soldiei, ilmposing on them an apprenticeship for which Frenchmen arc uvrl ' and so on, do not speak well for his discretion in military matters. When the Revolution actually broke out, M. Miot lomed the National Guard and became ...

THE POEMS OF EDGAR ALLAN POE.*

... very annoying, and they escape from it by a dciict negation-Mr. Henry James, the typical literary American, even veneurin to speak of Poe's very valueless verses. Such men as Mr. James -k us if wve are sincere in preferring these light tones of music ...

THE WHITE SEA PENINSULA.*

... 'I bll' most amusing person in the whole book. The Linguist was ClC tld Uccause he could speak Russian, while the Expedition could t ItAt then lie could not speak English, which the Expedition could; IL'IcIfore fell to MIr. Rae's lot throughout the journey ...

MARRIAGE.*

... in Scotland he will not understand the sharp division of ranks which still, and not less in the most Radical, politically speaking, circles than in others, prevails there. But it is not unimportant to take note of these things in considering the pecu- ...

BARRY'S LECTURES ON ARCHITECTURE.*

... appointed professor of Architecture, to I88o, when he died,. on the 27th of January, of'an apoplectic stroke while in the act of speaking at a council meeting of the Royal Academy. We have only one serious fault to find with the volume which his brother has prepared ...

THE CORRESPONDENCE OF ROBERT SOUTHEY.*

... and darkened days which were all that Fate allowed her. Of Southey's share in this correspondence it is hardly possibqle to speak so unreservedly. His great qualities of head. and heart are of course visible throughout, his love for his home, his faithfulness ...

BEGGAR MY NEIGHBOUR.*

... great some of them. For the purposes of the uncritical reader (and even of the critical reader who is duly tolerant, or to speak more pro- perly duly grateful, for such mercies as lie receives) these books are quite as good as technically better ones. ...

THROUGH SIBERIA.*

... what amount of judgment he brings to tror c tion of his self-imposed task. In soinc ways Sir. Lansdell has a better right to speak about Siberia l ?? 'prcvios A estern traveller. He went right through the country ll nen, on the Ural boundary, to Nikolaievsk ...