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LITERARY LOTTERY

... si? give a short description of this document. th ha Historically speaking, an Eisteddftd pro- th, or gramme is a literary composition of recent as1 date. We are not in a position to speak in w with bibliographical aeuthosity on the subject, th, but we ...

THE COMIC PRESS,

... to put up with.-Madas Il Baronne (who will speak English)- And tell me, Mistress Brown, your clevaro 'usband, who 'ave a so beautiful talent-is ho yet of ze Royal Academy ? Our artist's wife (who will speak French)- OhD non, madame helas I Selennent ...

l fr~toto Nook I THE

... the Yellow Book, when one looks at all, for literature no less than art of the Independent Theatre order-unlicensed, so to speak, by the Lord Chamberlain of the High Arts. As for the stories, with few excep- tions they are a weariness, which is much to ...

Published: Saturday 21 July 1894
Newspaper: Graphic
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 430 | Page: 24 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

THE YELLOW BOOK

... painted with flowers, and mellow autumn gilds the woodland. Speaking of the garden, lie says:- Here dwell my chosen books, whose leaves With healing breath The ache of discontent assuage, And speak from each illumined page The patience that my soul reprieves ...

THE ART JOURNAL

... creatures exhibiting li- elegance and coquetry, pictorial confections of i- refined woman, so to speak, to those lugubrious and fatal subjects which speak to us of lives mis- spent, of physical and moral health overdrawn. His work will thus rensain as ...

NOTES AND QUERIES

... 'W.AT. ART ort PUAr.rO SPEAKING.. (Que'sy No. 1,361, July 13.) I 1,521 ~The subject is large. I submit the followinh hints for consideration of Noviee :- n. L. Know thdroughily wlaf you intend to speak about. a 2. Wlien speaking, open the mouth. Spurgeon ...

FARM AND FIELD

... aurvivor was deserted. hle difficnlty in all such cases is to provide a sufficient rupply of natural food. A BRAV45 StOTmIR. Speaking of thrushes, I am sorry to have to report that our favourite black Sambo, a clever eat, with extraordinary perceptive ...

Holiday Literature

... author without ideas; 'it is' impossible to imagine one without the other. Of course of the former it would be presumptuous to speak, for the latest thing in 'women is a trifle peculiar; as to the latter part: of the dictum, let M. Smilqvsky go sift a mass ...

Published: Saturday 28 July 1894
Newspaper: Graphic
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 959 | Page: 30 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

LITERARY NOTICES

... delightful book an we gave the key - note of the author's of if The genieral impressior; of the Bl to is poetry; the mouth speaks of stemr Fe the eyes draw tears of sympathy; fo 'broai, low forehead reveals deep thought; at iL5 the ?? eyebrows have a ...

BURIED ALIVE

... tongue from closing the gullet, and administer some nourishment, With the aid of heat and friction the patient was able to speak in halt an hear, and recognise the bystanders, On another occasion he repeated the experi. ifment before Ranjit Siagh, when ...

CORPORATION MUSEUM AND ART GALLERY

... determining the scope and aim of gifted artists who followed him. He has been an inspiration to many, and, though dead, he yet speaks on many of the canvases in our annual exhibitions. He, like Rossetti and Holman Huntn, too, belongs to the history of British ...

THE PETERBOROUGH SHOW

... to see the prizes so monopolised, it cannot be denied that his hounds evon by sheer merit, and imposed them- selves, so to speak, upon the judges. The Oakley, Cheshire, and Blaukney packs did best of the others ; but it was practically a case of the W ...