A SCOT-AUSTRALIAN POET

... echolees harmony, joyously o dyinog- Dying in faint suspirations o'er meadow and forest l and hill. a * , . . , . . Peace-speaking night of 'the South, will thine influ- j ence last through my sleeping, Dream with my dreaming, awake with my waking, 1 and ...

ON THE PHONOGRAPH

... died away th To isolece in the olden time, Ca When we had touched Life's golden prime, hil Vill ohat m us old and grey. e You speak your note-new notion that! 01 'Ihe Wtl with it irnprest th You then detach and lay it flist, he The postman does the rest. ...

LITERATURE

... any rate, even better scope for! the faculty he possesses in such a high degree of makging( the men of past ages live, and speak, I and act like ordinary human beings, The story I of Joseph was ready made to hiis hand as a perfect romance, which has a ...

CARDIFF AMUSEMENTS

... roughly rare pure voice making her Ewsie Kai - tnard admirable. Of Miss Eaidde Crofton (Pkmbs) I it would be irmposaiblo to speak too highly; - when Cardiff saw her last as Med lalyaret in Ruddigore the verdict was al that even an artist could desire ...

PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS

... Lii e spit-it, by Mr. Horace 'Wheatley, Mr. Edwin -s N L-ever as the evil gemius affordking him capital see ¶O support, end speaking his lines with natural tal emphasis, and dramatic force, while Messrs. Th Franlk Breen, Arthur BEhaky, and Valentine ?? it ...

THE ROYAL DUBLIN SOCIETY'S MUSICAL RECITALS

... 6lvour, with grt arepgth; as need by the bhieaikY, 5rgy.iid deosi qra (Jrolahd. Tbon' ends ottloii doelm itbetb 3* to 3 Toe ?? speaks for itsel I I-.AM ?? to;*W fow youw that we .ot, tie (ltfb 2s e al safely on Thursdaa ereiW', e- tbtl It eIselenAt. F J D ...

ART NOTES

... expose them to the public is the best way which the accommodation at command admits of. * X * * * In saying this, I do not speak without book. It becomes evident, tbere. fore, that it is to the Government that we must appeal, and that it is the Govern- ...

LITERATURE

... thing-in-itself, to lay. There isano such idealism an that of whose terms 'our author speaks. When a man says lIam. going to bed, or lI~ees a chaiir, he in speaking wa, muich, ion teorms of idaim nin evrm -of anything else. There is still extant an ...

AROUND THE ARTISTS' STUDIOS: A FORECAST.—II

... Southwold towards the end of the great ten days' gale, which so impressed the oldest inhabitant of the East Coast last autumn. Speaking of the difficulties encountered in painting this picture from nature Mr. Moore said This picture, together with the studies ...

LUCIFER AT THE ALBERT HALL

... ushers in the voices to the final shriek of ' Lucifer ?? as the hurly-burly dies away in the distance and the fallen angel speaks. In strong contrast to this is the subsequent chorus, 'Yonder in drear and gloomy gloaming ?? this is a tranquil and tender ...

FASHION AND VARIETIES

... the visiting committee for the past month was rpd at the meeting yesterday, and considered fflost satisfactory. 1le visitors speak in the highest terms of tre order which Ithey found prevailed throughout the heuse at each visit which they paid whilst, on ...

MUSIC

... dramatic power which the composer displays when needed, are distinctly in its I favour. Of the artists it is necessary first to speak of I Madame FLemmenz Sherrington, -who after a long absence has~now returned to the concert platform. Her voice is still in ...