SPEAK TO MY HEART

... vanquished doubt - With the morning's stainless freshness pulsing my yearning bremt, Speak to my soul my Saviour, and give me of Thy rest. Speak to my heart, Lord Jeaus ;speak with the still emall voles, With the joy of the spirits bringing, oh I bid my heart ...

AN EXPERT ON AFTER-DINNER SPEAKING

... AN EXPERT ON AFTER-DINNER SPEAKING. IN Mr. Lo,,,ell's last volume of poems there is heartsease as well as rue. The late Minister is an optimist, and he knows it:-- For me Fate gave, whate'er she else denied, A nature sloping to the southern side ...

SONNET

... the pyebbly bed below. Vast strength has yonder cistle's rocky bse, And there is somethinn on its ag$d face tv'n yet that speaks its stateliness. No 1ns Will now come near it, 'cepting mighty time Who has defaced it, and will eat his way Ripht to itscore ...

DEITY

... worship, oh, InIm esaublei The God Soom whom the winter with its wonders Comes with Its mystic froatjwing o er the world, Speaks by a touch.-tbe brooding stvant ponders, As awfdt-srucceeding lessons are unfurled. Teach me, oh, 'sander ?? to lose Thee ...

AMUSEMENTS

... you not move on yourself '? I did not try to tin speak to you, did I I I wanted to speak to Mr Dick, D who has been my good friend since I was a boy. i Now come, don't lean your face on your hands wh Y speak up like man. At this stage Tough turned Sta h ...

AUTUMN LEAVES

... so tbat t 'o s m:;ytbe ready when the Loid Calls tbee to joys leyond thy keenest thought. Thus autuin leaves monastically speak. )ii;cklCY. _T. W. L3 ...

HUNGARY AND THE PARIS EXHIBITION

... treasares Ch entrusted to it god faith and the flags placed under thi ibt oharge.m I. Tiaza'b, speaking in this way, does fes not address himself to ?? only, He speaks thl to all nations, spreading; alarn, and nealing a heavy 'bel blow to an immense undertaking ...

MR. IRVING IN AMERICA

... Terry were called for rmany times, and dually, in response to repeated demands for a speech, Mr. Irving appeared alorie, and, speaking with much iffilculty, gave a brief address. He said:- The inevitable moment has come when I must bid you farewell, and I ...

SOME FRENCH NOVELS

... authorship-of which we have had one, if not two, notable examples in our own country, Beaumont and Fletcher, and if one may speak of them in the same breath) two popular novelists of * Renee Mauperin; a Realistic Novel. By Edmond and Jules de Goncourt ...

LONG AGO AND FAR AWAY

... broad pathways choosing,- And their golden hours miasusing,- will not come. Par awsay, an'd lona ago; :till tj the world He speaks; Still on the heart bowed down with woe His losvesy sweet inusic-breaks. What though my feet have stumbled? What tlmouhb my ...

Extracts from New Books

... IThe Storage of Life as a Sanitary Study. Regarding tissue we read- We speak of the elasticity of youth, the rigidity of age; roe speas figuratively it will be said. No I we speak actually; f or we are merely describing differences dependent purely on ...

HOW TO PRONOUNCE PARNELL

... From Pope, from Parnell, or from Gay ? And Goldsmith begins his epitaph: This tomb inscrib'd to gentle Parnell's name, May speak our gratitude, but not his fame. And Mitford, in his Dedicatory Epistle to the Rev. Alexander Dyce, writes: My heart reflects ...