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Daily News (London)

A Lost Poet

... and tho rest, To leur tho stories of tiby fixslied love From that smouth tongue whose music hell can move; Then wilt thou speak of banqueting ?? Of masques and revels which sweet Youth did make, Of tourneys and great challegrge of knights, And all these ...

MUSIC AND MUSICIANS

... moral character, may tend to revive old con- Is troversies, But, on the other hand, Mr. Niecks e does not spare his hero, he speaks plainly of Chopin's fickleness in love matters, and indeed throughout the volume he avoids the fault of unreasoning laudation ...

Lord Granville on Art

... where nothing had grown b dore. Lord Gt.ssvmILLE, however, could not continue iu this con- ] iident strain when ho bad to speak of our position in high art. He could I only remind us that great authorities were urrayed on one side and on the other, and ...

EARL GRANVILLE ON BRITISH ART AND EXHIBITIONS

... in no iway interfert with its prosoeritv. It was at one time vc s thought that England would no toxhibit anytbing wartla K speaking- of in the wray of British art, but I uam happy to Ito say --Itt bi Frederick Leightoni, and. Tdr. AgnewV ce 1) and oter ...

MUSIC

... obliged to vote cc ?? the Bill. li. Tisca, thit Premier, expressed his e- regret Iliac he could Dot tranquillise else lest speak-er, vs acid went oen to state moat emphatically titat it It Pasragraphi 14 Were scot ailooted withiout namendment isthe Government ...

MUSIC AND MUSICIANS

... fri Miss Marie Titieus made her dibut on Mon- C day last with the Marie Roze concert party at a Ccrk, The locall critics speak favourably of the e, young lady, who sang Mozart's IIDell vieni non liv tardar and Sir Arthur Sullivain's II My dearest - ...

THE THEATRES

... Tksere are precedents for this particular tb, form of condescension on the part of distin- inj. guished perftirmers; hut it speaks ill for the rto, London stagei that it is -willing to dispense with. th the services oSl, such an actor as Mr. Mackintosh ...

THE PARIS EXHIBITION

... thousrnd tps i ng Of upoaitatqpoe. They will remember it bst toi by the Exhibitions of 1867 and 1878, It i, uc t roughly speaking, 3,000 feet long and 2,300 feet de in wide. But even this space is nst Sul lfor this Exhibition. The grounds of the Trocadro ...

TARES AT THE OPERA COMIQUE

... systet of counting Was the same as that an on g the Aryan races. THE H oN. B., COlEIDGIE , ox.P.,O LIBzRAL , pn spozre.- Speaking last night at Leeds, the Hon. B. Colerdde, M.P., remarked, in reviewin g the prospects of the Liberal party, that it was ...

THE GROSVENOR GALLERY

... renderings of The Valley I Farm, the quiet homestead known as Willy C Lott's House. The said Willy, if tradition c speaks truly, possessed to a resmarkable extent t a cat-likf attachment to a particular locality, 0 for during eighty years he had ...

MR. JOHN MOBLEY ON LITER&TURE AND PHILANTHROPY

... o1r-e amnt amonget the men of letters of this day. p tChes)A famous contemporary of Mr. Gibbon and c: ty f r Johnson, in speaking of another friend . AOf his, gave utterance to - or rather wrote - u asthe famous FIie ~that he was ?? wit, If be not first ...

THE THEATRES

... The cast remains sub- t stantially as before. girl Mr. Augustrm Harris, Miss Melnotto, and sle. 1Jr. Charles Haris-not to speak of some less aud cornspicekoiia personages-are all credited with bur -projects Sm' building now theatres.. Meanwhile SiA there ...