OLIVER GOLDSMITH

... than a trifle. too sentimental over him. In the great biography, when Golds~mith speaks you have no doubt wvhose the voice is but in Mr. Moore's -story Goldsumitlh speaks by deputy-a very clever deputy, but only a deputy after all, and every now and again ...

THE LAST SHALL BE FIRST

... And smiling fortune points a way to fame Ahoniz some path of honour, free fromn blame, t To onle, the call to do great deeds speaks loud h To one, amlid a vast unhonoured crowd, c Fiar otherwise the comamon lot of man. e Our hourly toil but seeks the mleans ...

Poetry of To-Day

... and Other Poems (Kegan Paul). In his Any Dreimer to His Dream he seems to give the keynote to his own verse, for he speaks not only of his love for nature, but also of the gentle melancholy with which much of his poetry is informed. I feel the beauty ...

Published: Saturday 18 November 1893
Newspaper: Graphic
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 446 | Page: 9 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

Literature

... It is not good to speak evil of all whom we know bad ; it is worse to judge evil of any who may prove good. To speak ill upon know. t ledge Shows a want of charity; to speak ill upon suR- picion shows a went of honesty. I will not speak so bad as I know ...

THE OLD SCHOOL LIST

... are all in the old School List. There's a grave grey lawyer in King's Bench-walk, Whose clients are passing few: He seldom speaks: in those lonely weeks What on earth can he find to do? Well-he stroked the eight-what a splendid fate! And the Newczvestle ...

MY MUSICAL LIFE AND RECOLLECTIONS

... distrustful of his ability to speak a! - English, M. Riviiere used to carry a card with q Trafalgar-square written plainly upon it. This ol when he lost himself, lie showed to a policeman, and as lie often did so without speaking a word, he was more n than ...

Published: Saturday 23 September 1893
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 906 | Page: 15 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

AMUSEMENTS IN NOTTINGHAM

... towel. Bourboule and Pougues, containing arsenic, are good-must I speak of anything sounpleasant?-for pimply faces, but are not cleansing like Vichy, because they contain no soda to speak of. No chemist can compound any of these waters as they come from ...

Published: Saturday 18 December 1897
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 813 | Page: 22 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

STRANGE MESSAGES FROM THE NEXT WORLD

... for the Queen, speaks of her Spiritual powers, and gives information as to the Prince's associates and occupations in the inner life. Other Royal communicators are Mary, Queen of Scots, Victor Emanuel, the Tzar, &c. They all speak most instructively ...

THE READER

... roots. Of the four rates, the Tshi- speaking peoples are the least civilised, ai Il the Ga-speaking peoples slightly more advanced, while among the Ewe-speaking peoples we can see the crude conceptions or the Tshi-speaking tribes considerably modified, and ...

Published: Saturday 13 December 1890
Newspaper: Graphic
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 2343 | Page: 17 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

The Rivals at the Court Theatre

... to her charge; but a complaint must needs be exaggerated which speaks of countless absurdities which it would be cruel to dwell upon. On the contrary, Miss Noel appeared to me to speak distinctly and with due emphasis in tones that reminded me of that ...

Published: Saturday 16 November 1895
Newspaper: Graphic
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1101 | Page: 16 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

THE ART OF DERSSING

... coiseqlluenre, tie is the best iressed man in tlhe civilised world; lie speaks ti own,language, amid he spelks it Vell. We, (io the otel I) handi are striving all the tinme to speak a foreign longue, andtei Wel re doing it with a Imopelessly Emiglisi accent ...

REVIEWS

... they speak Englisl ' 'No, not one of them.' ' Can you speak Italian ?? ' Not a xord' ' Then how can you answer for the ?? 1 can answer only fin one ?? I wihich1 one is that ? ' ' This one,' I said, 'lie can speak a little IFrecc, ainidr .I cal speak French ...