Refine Search

Advertisements & Notices

... Simmons. But ST. PETERSBURG IN SPRING ?? CHARLES JOHNSTON. 'ars illustrated from Photograpfhs. AN IMAGINATIVE WOMAN ?? THOMAS HARDY. hiS Illustrated by Arthur Jule Goodman. Ich THE TOLLEMACHES OF HELMINGHAM. .ARTHUR H. BEAVAN. 'U111 Illustraled from ...

THE POET OF THE DAILY TELIGRAPH

... shall be met by home production. IThe Science of Fiction is a symposium by Messrs. Paul Bourget, \Valter Besant, and Thomas Hardy. The first-iamed author is profound and cautious. Mr. Besant urges the claims of a school of fiction, holding that novelists ...

Literary Notes, News, and Echoes

... phrase. To the one single passage (not a very convincing one) which the Speaker article quotes from the inevitable Mr. Thomas Hardy (the lament of Marty South over Giles Winterborne's grave in the Woodlanders) it would be easy to add dozens from other ...

THEATRES

... the benefit of Mrs. Jeune's Holiday Fund at the LYCEUM, on Wednesday, was an occasional poetical address, written by Mr. Thomas Hardy, the novelist, and delivered by Miss Ada Rehan. ...

Published: Saturday 26 July 1890
Newspaper: Graphic
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1620 | Page: 21 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

REVIEWS

... of our mouths. Of this wde cnn only say with red-eyed Widow Edlin, We can't sto17acll 'ln. * 'Jele the Obscure.'' By Thomas Hardy. (London: Osgood.) TWO NOVELS. Gladys Woodley. By Eglantine. (London Elliot Stock.) Gladys Woodley is a young lady who ...

LITERARY NOTES, NEWS, AND ECHOES

... Recommended ; will be welcomed by All Classes. Mr. Tustin McCarthy should be bought because His Heroines are Charming; ' Mr. Thomas Hardy. because His Novels are Class!CS. To these particular recommendations, some general inducements are appended. ' t iction ...

REVIEWS

... covered his bearings. The Burden of a Woman seems pitched in the key of village tragedy, but is the work neither of a Thomas Hardy nor of a Mrs. Woods. For all that it is a story, pretty enough to read, with genuine patches of power. Eternal is the problem ...

Magazines

... flawless from face to feet. Under the heading Candour in English Fiction, Mr. Walter Besant, Mrs. Lynn Linton, and Mr. Thomas Hardy discusi, the pros and cons for realism in English fiction. Mr. Besant sat Those writers who yearn to treat of the adulteress ...

Published: Saturday 11 January 1890
Newspaper: Graphic
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1600 | Page: 12 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

MR. AND MRS. H. A. JONES' RECEPTION

... Seton, Dr. Greenwood and Mrs Greenwood, Dr. Fletcher, Dr. Furnivall, Dr. and Mrs Parker, Professor and Mrs Herkomer, Mr Thomas Hardy, Mr and Mrs T. P. O'Connor, Mr Justin M'Carthy, M.P., Mr Justin Huntly M'Carthy, M.P, Miss M'Carthy, Rev. Stewart Headlam ...

Published: Saturday 05 July 1890
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1361 | Page: 8 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

LITERARY NOTES

... Louis Stevenson's works-called the EIdinburgh Edition, which Messrs. Chatto and WindLis are going to bring out. Mr. Thomas Hardy has now trade arrangements wvithl Messrs. Osgood, Mellvaine, and Co. for the sole publication fom Ijily I. next of his ...

LITERARY NOTES, NEWS, AND ECHOES

... we can remember of an American magazine ever produced. Amiong Eniiglish writers whose wvork appears are Walter Besant, Thomas Hardy, R. L. Stevenson (vho contributes a poemn); some of the Americans are Bret Ilarte, Henry James, H. C. Bunner, and G. XV ...

LITERATURE

... hbs rival, whom his soirit is afterwards allowed to haullt and to drive to destruction. The Return of the Native, by Thomas Hardy (Sampson Low, Marston ald ?? is the latest addition to the new half-crown edition of this well- known author's works. The ...