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Liverpool Mercury

WORKMEN AND MUSEUMS

... waters cannot quench love, neither can the floods drown it . . . for love is strong as 4 tdeath; and thestory of Egypti ove, speak- ring to us rom the tombtughtherthlld oty, has a weird lesson for usal The Egyptian childwas taught that this life is-not all ...

THE ROSA OPERA SEASON

... TO E=3DI:RS-OXTr E LrVEatmOOn Xncunr. Gentlemen,-Mfay I ask the favour of your in- sertion of bthe followinz letter, which speaks [for ?? faithfully, WVM GrusEwoon, Secretarv. I Liverpool Central Relief and Charity Orguanisa- tion Society, Imperial-buildings ...

CHURCH REFORM

... doing, and banish the apathy which nas come over the Liberals of this great city. Let us once more have a chairmnan wvho can speak as ch'airmuu of the Liberals, an~d not of a division. Let us have a union of the Radicals and Viberals, and so keep the banner ...

WORKMEN AND MUSEUMS

... they breathe through the sides. One curinus result of this is seen in the fact that they have M circulation of the blood, to speak of. With us the blood is driven over all our complex system, bearing its life-giving products to every mart, and bringing back ...

MAGAZIES FOR JANUARY

... Temptation is a graphic specimen of story- telling, and The Ode on a Near Prospect of Eton College, the shade of Dr. Hawtrey speak- ing, is full of quiet classical humour. Mr. George Sainibury writes on George Borrow, of whom he says that his real claims ...

MUSICAL NOTES

... value of 90 guineas a year as has been won by larrv Hunt (aged 10),'a son 'ed of Dr. W. H. Hunt, of Birkenhead. uo Everybody speaks with sorrow of his death he and with warm and kindly words of his life, Lx- and in this Joseph Maas has his best memoriaL ...

SUNDAY ART VIEW OF TWO CITIES

... effort is being made by xnembers of the Corporation to increase the number of free Sundays during the year. This ii plain speaking; and it is an extraordinay; thing to know of a people systematically ox- luded fromit galleries and smusus for years,, that ...

LITRARY NOTICES

... his- s toricalmaterialsarswellmanaged. Occasionally I we meetwith flgureswhich are arclyaceurate, . such as where Mr. Heywood speaks of Jupiter I being pricked from repose by banter-loving - bolts, by which he does not surely mean us to understand needles ...

LITERARY NOTES

... Mr. Ruskin's work. But ?? all this there has been a mass of promiscuous writing, of which no competent critic could always speak well. Mr. Ruskin is accredited with the character of a humourist, but his occasional pieces are nearly always-curiously deficient ...

[ill] NOTICES

... well familiar, and on which he has Vritten a good, deal. The conclusion at white he arrives is this, that if people were to speak their minds freely, most of them would wish the really Irish mem- bers away from Westminster, while they would not wish the ...

MUSICAL NOTES

... tone is full and pure, his L techniqe advanced, and his style broad and sympathetic. Sedulously studying the art of public speak- ing, Mr. Barton M'Guckin's rising reputation as an orator threatens to overshadow that which lhe has attained as a singer ...

FASHIONS FOR FEBRUARY

... only be made in good and well- draping materials, aand the fronts open over an 'under-diess; but it is too early as yet to speak very decisively on the subject. Beads, embroideries, a profusion of ribbons and aces, are worn a trinmings to toilettes of ...