SOUTH HINCKSEY HORTICULTURAL SHOW

... Crippe ; 2, Speaks; (b) 11. I, Chivers, 2, Gurdeo. Ditto, red round-(a) 1, Price; )88 2 Speaks: (b) I Bullook ; 2, Chivers. Ditto, white Sy kidney-(a) 1. Speaks; 2, Cripps ; (b1 1, Dickens; 2, nt Cbiver3. Ditto, red kiduey-(sA 1, Curry ; 2, Speaks D (b) 1 ...

ACTING AND THE ART OF SPEECH

... Dupont Vernon writes-' Speak to a friend in the street after havingrun to join him; you speak with the chest register; leave the bedroom of your sick mother with the physician. and say to him these simple words, Well! doctor? Speak in a room of which the ...

Published: Saturday 27 February 1892
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1524 | Page: 15 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

ACTING AND THE ART OF SPEECH

... to be heard by a thirtd petson who is in the next apartment. In these cases you speak wvith the chest register. Every time iii a word that you speak in a low voice you speak from the chest, otherwise called tc nudi itn. Observe these two men in this di ...

Published: Saturday 27 February 1892
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1563 | Page: 15 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

A LONG JOURNEY TO SEE THE QUEEN

... with the berries green, then turning ripe, ol and at last in full fruit Mrs. Ris speaks good aU English,atnd Waee quite defighted at having arrived tt in England. In speaking of the days of slavery, tt the little body said, Out only friend was England ...

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 ...

REMARKABLE RESCUE IN THE CHANNEL

... clad only in a flannel shirt, and was so exhausted when taken out of the water that he was unable to stand, and ouild hot speak. On the way to Plymouth the man sufficiectly recovered to inform the master that he was a Russian sailor, and that he had jumped ...

DRAWING PAPER AND THE FADING OF WATER-COLOURS

... have given the smallest countenance to the charges that they were snbjected to any ?? aealinu. As to when I shall speak, whether I shall speak at all, whom T shallanswer, cr what I shall say, I claim the same right as any other member to exercise my own ...

New Books and New Editions

... implied in his writing, unfortunately, such as at all to redeem the subject as fiction. As the characters speak, so their author himself speaks-even when he is purely himself, and not merely a histrionic mouthpiece-in dialect! and a dialect so chosen ...

THE [ill] SONG

... tales are told and jokes are eracked, Aiid laggots blaze and soit; Death sits down in the inglensook Sits down and doth not speak; Dlit lie puts his arm round the maid that's warm, Au she tilgles in the cheek. Death ! Death ' Death is master of lord and ...

TALES TO TELL

... difficalty siti.. in oitei-b you to speak up, saii- the lawycr, in i Ito a iery loud, commanding voice, of, bat I hope not, air, shouted the witness ?? the De Icibl top Qf hij lungs, Coll solar ElHow dare you speak to me in that way 7 ane *ity1 angrily ...

Wagner's Operas at Theatrical Prices

... enterprise deserved. There were no stars In the cast o Tristan und Isolde, and, indeed, most of the company engaged were English-speaking artists ; for it was originally intended that the work should be given in our tongue. Thus, Miss Palliser, of the English ...

Published: Saturday 05 November 1892
Newspaper: Graphic
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1260 | Page: 21 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

ROUGHING IT FOR GOLD

... took place nearly twenty years ago. As his book was published only last year, he could not speak with certainty as to all the incidents, but generally speaking they were as nearly accurate as possible, y3v Mr. Colam: Do you complain of the statement that ...