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Republic of Ireland, Republic of Ireland

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Dublin, Republic of Ireland

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75

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75

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FASHION AND VARIETIES

... Saturday night.- Y ours faithfully. -e J. WV. Mo&xAN, Hon Secretary. a WOMEN B OKXMA KERS AT DONCASTER T The DeaL of Manchester, speaking at a i- meeting in the Manchester Town Hal, said ie he had read wita the. deepest regret-with a 1S I feeling almost of positive ...

FASHION AND VARIETIES

... recollection. I told Mr Rushe, solicitor, Monaghan, and the Rev G M'Meel what occurred, and what my reply was. Perhaps they can speak as to the fact,. I emphatically 'Ontradict the version given at the Clones meeting.-I am, ?? WHIMSICAL WALKERRS OLD TROUSERS ...

MAGAZINES FOR MAY

... treat- ment:- am driven by may longing, Of smy thought I bear the summons 'That to singing I betake me, That I give myself to speaking, That our race's lay I utter, Smgs. for ages handed downward. Words upon my lips are meltiig, And the eager tones escaping ...

FASHION AND VARIETIES

... a ceucludecl5 rsraythnum of the krind. But who is W~. Lynch, and when and Where was he authorised to go tee Irsehuad and speak for tire people af ?? eta sw quaes- ietoss of Home Rule ok seq other question?7 Mr. Lyunch beats tht -teo&rfd en! tine three ...

CAHIRMEE ANNUAL HORSE FAIR

... no partiality cf for Shandons declares that the objectien which e gave the Dolphin crew the races was a 'paltry . one it speaks badly for the sportsmanlike .e proplensities of the XDolphin crew. As for the 3, Dolphin crew, as a lecal, paper here remarks ...

BOOKS OF THE DAY

... root tharn aily teaching of the schools. Many of them have been lost irrevocably. They are dying year by year with the Irish-speak- ing peasants; and Vwith tenm go a light for 5g the study of the native Gaelic spirit and! t most valuable help to the ethnologist ...

DUBLIN MUSICAL SOCIETY'S CONCERT

... expense of the tenors. But when the gene- ral average wad so good, fault-finding is out of place. It would be very gratifying to speak well of the 'Dream of Jubal, for its composer i: has done mauch for muic in Great Britain and this particular work has, we ...

LITERATURE AND JOURNALISM

... altogether the new branch promises to be a source of immense strength to the organisa- tion. We hone it will stirthe Irish-speaking population of Munster to pride in their dis- tinction and lead them to preserve the trea- sure of wbich they are the inheritors ...

BOOKS OF THE DAY

... into a lough witbout going .a step further or backer-a tire enpugh astliment .generally. though the lough may 'be, strictly 'speaking, the sea-m. fact which, amid this intricate, labyrinth of water and land, is sometimes made apparent: to sight only by. a ...

MR. W.P.MOLLOY'S CONCERT

... IRISH POOR SCHOLAR. The following letter appears in to.day's Speaker:- I SiR-It is, I think, due to the readers of the Speak-er, who helped to brighten his last days, to let them know that my poor old neigh- bour, Master Tom Duffy, of Lochaunnyalla ...

BOOKS OF THE DAY

... fair to him to add that ho justifies his position as a protest against meaningless idolatry, and refers to his omission to speak of th great and eln- during qualities of Shelley as a poet as due toa their having been well and ardently drwelt upon ...

BOOKS OF THE DAY

... melancholy of his poems largely recalls his less, though scarcely less, unhappy contemporary. Shelley. To transla- tion-we speak, however, of his prose transla- tions-he brings the lofty conception of his work which enabled Coleridge to produce his Wa ...