AMERICA'S EXPANSION.*

... writes Captainan E is the true route), will introduceanewcom m j ema, and new international rivarie, whic will render the Caribbean Sea one of the world's strategically most vital quarters. Over that Nsa and the canal, and the lands, isalar, or con- tnental ...

THE BRITON'S LAND

... waves of the Sainr. Lawrcace pour; Where Uishers by Newfoundland reap 'lThb ony hacvest of thre deep; J; Y WVere, on the Caribbean Iles, Bcgiht worth pa~s, the ocean smiles; PA Where Demnerara's lwat'ry plains Eixult in wveolth ef vogar-cenes. en Usn arctic ...

BOOKS RECEIVED

... Adventures. By Grant Allen with illustrations by Gordon'Browns. Ge. (Graxit I Richards.) The Queen of Atlantis. A Romance oft Caribbean Sea. By Frank Aubrey. Ga. (no)-ifte son and Co.) The Hymns and Ayma-Writers of the Church Hymnair B9 Rev. John Brownlie ...

The Island of Montserrat

... a breadth of five miles from east to west It is composed of a small cluster of volcanic mountain tops, rising out of the Caribbean Sea, to the height of 3,ooo feet, the summits being often concealed bay floating clouds. Their steep sides are covered with ...

NEW BOOKS

... ery, continues to br fasciniate succoodingt generations, so that the ar lonely occupalnt of the dosert island iu the Wv. Caribbean Sea is as real It personage to most P;1 people as any one of their acunaintances. In Defoe's itiseellanieous writings there ...

THE OCTOBER MAGAZINES:II

... promising fashion. Captain N. T. Mahan, of the U.S navy, writes upon the strategic features ofth- Gulf of Mexico and the Caribbean Sea. The popularity of golf all over the world is surprising. It has (,been said that one can start from Liverpool and go ...

LITERARY NOTES

... truly says, the story is one to stir the hearts of nanny natiores. The volume is unique in its way, as I the sbores of the Caribbean Sea have been the scene of mar- vellous adventures, of intense struggles be- tweesn races and people, of pain, trouble. and ...

THE DRAMA IN BERLIN

... recognised and comnplied with by the composer. The scene opens amidst tropical surroundings; it repre- sents an island in the Caribbean Sea. A Portuguese sailor, named Gonsalva, was wrecked upon the island years before, and lives in compulsory exile, no vessel ...

Published: Saturday 14 July 1894
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1367 | Page: 10 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

LITERARY & OTHER NOTICES

... locally as own e Kate Tate, who was believed at one time to ho the vie- work ,-tile of the tragedy. thle a HUuRRICANE IN THr CARIBBEAN SLA,-NwO s ?? ,ehas reached Baltimore that a disastrous hur'ricane clair ,y visited the islands of Old Providence and Sc ...

BOOKS AND BOOKMEN

... Power, Preparedness fet Naval War, A Twentieth-Century Cutlook, and Strategic Features of the Guli of Mfexico and Caribbean Sea. i The irruption of C:hristmas numbers has begun, as usual, a good month before Yuletide. The Christmas Number of the ...

THE DRAMA IN BERLIN

... recognised and complied with by the composer. The scene opens ?? tropical surroundings ; it repre- sents an island iu the Caribbean Sea. A Portuguese sailor, named Gonsalva, was wrecked upon the island years before, and lives il compulsory exile, rio vessel ...

Published: Saturday 14 July 1894
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1460 | Page: 10 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

SOME WINTER STORY BOOKS

... Book well ; and his vivid pen fairly makes 'his reader feel the motion of the good frigate Rattler as she flies through the Caribbean Seas. Mr. H. H-. Boyesen has written some pleasant Norsel'mnd Tales, of which the best is the Feud of the Wildhaymen. ...