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THE RELIGIOUS TRACT SOCIETY'S MAGAZINES

... publications in their way, fall of good, plain, Christian instruction. THE COTTAGER AND ARTIZAN has value in its pictures, not to speak of its interesting letterpress. THE CILD'S Co0n'ANION and OUR LITsLE DOTs are always favourites with young people. The coloured ...

LITERATURE

... of typical canes, from which we select:a e one. The R~ight Henonrable Courtly Knight an 0 having engaged a governess, speakeings five !be languages, to teach tun children, and suddenly, sn II dismissing her withent compensation becauase j B e she fell ...

SATURDAY POPULAR CONCERT

... b2 t dthe means t C ihi,,lmer ends in art. For the duinlculsies of double- fr; s, topping of that short mloveament, not to speak 3Y ?? of tlan artistic insight required fer a true reader- r o iefl are things that violinists of the^ showy b Iertificial ...

MAGAZINES

... and analy- tically with three types of woman- kind in this play -the mother, the maiden, and the friend. The gifted writer speaks of the pleasure she felt in playing to audiences such as that at Edinburgh who, when as Hermnione she descended from the pedestal ...

LITERATURE

... all Gaelic rspeakers, although its comnpiler mosdestly stateso ' that it has been especially intended for thoseC ;e Gaelic-speaking Caunadians wvho still take anI 4,interest in the poetry, traditions, and history of . C. their anestors. The pariod in wvhich ...

LITERATURE

... pianist. The boy avas passionately fonld ef. mnusic frorn the first; he krnew the namnes of the notes as soon as ho-could speak, and it is re-. corded that at two years old, when walking for. exercise is the gardens of Pasay, he-commensted on the barkring ...

MAGAZINES

... on this subject, they are acknowledging much more freely the fundamental identity of human nature. Thus Professor Bryce speaks with sympathy of the revolt against the mass of poverty and miisery that still exists among us, the belief that man was ...

LITERATURE

... I graphical details coannctedi with his subject. eq FeOn everything connected with Jewish customs en ,kand, Jewish life ha speaks with authority, andas atihe very freonently casts a new and inlterestting tolight on references in Christ's teaching or en ...

LITERATURE

... of Inter- ncationasl Dictionary, the publishers state that the work is intended to Le serviceable to the whole English-speaking population of the globe, so that the Lendoner, reading a story of Bret Hartejwill turn to such a dictionary for the slang ...

FINE ART INSTITUTE

... for us a qualified wb Idelight. To step here would be to regard the be: finality of art, if for convenuience we may so tot speak of what has no human limit, as a vet sensuous dream. Pictures must not be a merely decorative any moreo tham merely a, imitative ...

SATURDAY POPULAR CONCERTS

... the fourth and eighth symphonies n- are different, the style is from first to last Ri steadily progressive. Berlioz sins in speaking oe fo the introductory adagio as an artifice, but ve atones for it in the masterly analysis of the first ,a allegro, and ...

LITERATURE

... His epeiciag szntence is to only too suggestive of Hegel. Everybody le knows reality ; or to vary the phrase, wheic we .is speak of things acting, every one knows 11. actuality. It. is plain that we have here not a sne ear variation of phrase, but an ...