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Social Review (Dublin, Ireland : 1893), The

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Dublin, Dublin, Republic of Ireland

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The Social Review (Dublin, Ireland : 1893)

GENERAL NOTES

... this strike Madame Sarah Grand ? The Art of Thomas Hardy, by that rising young Irish literateur Mr. Lionel Johnson, has at length been published. The book contains two contributions from the pen of Mr. Hardy himself, one of which, The Fire at Tranter ...

LINEN GOODS OF ..A.x..r.., SIZTIDEI FOR 0-EIsTICR.A.I.. HOVE

... vivacious manner, and goes in for literary rather than fashionable acquaintanceships. One sees her hobnobbing with such men as Thomas Hardy, J. M. Barrie, and Henry Arthur Jones, the dramatist. Miss Madeline's strongest professed feeling is a dislike for tennis ...

ANSWERS TO CORRESPONDENTS

... better than many which I see in print, but it is no harm to caution you against falling into too pessimistic a vein. What Thomas Hardy calls '• the ache of modernity is too visible throughout. We all like to be thought even more modern and sad and hopeless ...

THE SOCIAL REVIEW descend to observe what shape of nose a footman had. or if he had one at all

... poem. You are going to make a fresh departure, and jump a dozen steps up the ladder at once. I don't believe Meredith or Thomas Hardy or Kipling will be in it with you! Well, that's a large order, said Stuart, pensively, but I think I shall make the ...

THE SOCIAL RIVIIW

... of Ireland, on Cromwell as a Soldier. Lord Wolseley will preside. The Hon. Mrs. Henniker has been collaborating with Thomas Hardy, and the first chapters of a novel, the work of their joint pens, will appear in March in the pages of a new English magazine ...

REVIEW

... Farrie, and David Christie Murray. Conan Doyle was a doctor, Stevenson an engineer, IValter Besant a college professor, Thomas Hardy and Hall Caine were architects, Jerome K. Jerome was a plain everyday clerk. NOVEMBER 25, 1893•] THE SOCIAL REVIEW. a nation ...

THE SOCIAL REVIEW 43 he gives me to understand that he had not regarded his apparent TI - IE PROPHECY

... Patrick Campbell has lost her voice, and Mrs. Tree is surpassing the best advertised actress of the day in Fedora. Mr. Thomas Hardy is dramatising Tess for the Campbell, and Mr. Forbes Robertson claims her for Juliet, and somebody else wants her, and ...

THE SOCIAL REVIEW

... can be fixed into a coat by anybody. • • • • Two very pleasing contributions to contemporary criticism are The Art of Thomas Hardy, by Lionel Johnson, with a bibliography by John Lane, the publisher, and a little volume by Annie Macdonnell, the first ...

THE SOCIAL REVIEW

... they have their lair. How, indeed, would such criticism apply to the really great novelists of to day—George Meredith, Thomas Hardy, Leo Tolstoi, Bjornstjerne Bjornson? Have not all these been men with a distinct and powerful message to deliver ?—with ...

ON WRITING FOR THE PRESS

... and Browning, masters of style as they are, can never be quite so popular as Tennyson and George Eliot, Longfellow and Thomas Hardy, who dealt not in mystification, and are understanded by the people. Whatever you have to say, my friend, Whether ...

SOCIETY IN TOWN AND COUNTRY

... Vesci, at Abbeyleix. The Hon. Mrs. Henniker's volume of short stories, Outlines, will be dedicated to Mr. Thomas Hardy, who, with Mrs. Hardy, paid a long visit to the Lord Lieutenant and Mrs. Henmier at the Viceregal Lodge last summer. Sr Edgar Vincent ...