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The Bystander

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... Every Evening at 8. VICTORY. (An Island Tale.) A Play in 3 Acts by Macdonald Hastings. Founded on the celebrated Novel by Joseph Conrad. Matinee. Every' Wed. and Sat., at 2.15. Extra Mat. Easter Mon. at 2.15. RINCE OF WALES. FAIR AND WARMER. Dorothy Dix, ...

Published: Wednesday 09 April 1919
Newspaper: The Bystander
County: London, England
Type: Advertisement | Words: 1112 | Page: 14 | Tags: none

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... MARIE LOHR. Every Evening at 8. VICTORY. A Play in 3 Acts by Macdonai.d Hastings Founded on the celebrated Novel by Joseph Conrad. Matinee. Every Wed. and Sat., at 2.15. PRINCE OF WALES. FAIR AND WARMER. Dorothy Dix, Ronald Squire, Edward Combermere ...

Published: Wednesday 02 April 1919
Newspaper: The Bystander
County: London, England
Type: Advertisement | Words: 1066 | Page: 14 | Tags: Illustrations 

Pacifism, Publicity, and Poetic Prose

... Alec IVaugh with his wife, Joan, and their baby, taken at the novelist's house, Oswalds-al-Bridge, near Canterbury, where Joseph Conrad lived for many years ...

Published: Wednesday 23 August 1933
Newspaper: The Bystander
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 1276 | Page: 28 | Tags: Review 

IN ENGLAND-NOW!

... living skeletons, the Hun has made of our poor, unfortunate men. S S3 Compunction is rare in women, someone, I think Joseph Conrad, has said. They are too pas sionate, too pedantic, too courageous. And certainly, as day alter day the Hun piles up his ...

Published: Wednesday 05 June 1918
Newspaper: The Bystander
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 1484 | Page: 8 | Tags: Illustrations 

IN ENGLAND-NOW!: A WEEKLY LETTER FROM BLANCHE

... Dear Cousin COME to think of it, life's really one long camou flage, isn't it?-- 'specially for women who are, as I think Joseph Conrad has put it, in the world, as at present organised, the suspected half of the population. sa a? A woman, avers that p ...

Published: Wednesday 20 March 1918
Newspaper: The Bystander
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 1483 | Page: 8 | Tags: Illustrations 

THE LIBRARY: Famous Novelists Active, After All!

... J i (Fisher Unwin.) Little Stories of Courtship. By Mary Stuart Cutting. (Hodder.) jjw The Mirror of the Sea. By Joseph Conrad. (Methuen I The Baroness Orczy The popular playwright and author has just published a new Scarlet Pimpernel story, entitled ...

Published: Wednesday 10 October 1906
Newspaper: The Bystander
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 1675 | Page: 41 | Tags: Review 

Have You Got an Allergen?

... bringing out new books, I mean. Simply thousands of 'em pouring out 'tween now and end of next month, so they tell me Joseph Conrad, Hugh Walpole, John Galsworthy, W. B. Maxwell, Warwick Deeping all the best, and the rest. Even the great Sir Hall and ...

Published: Wednesday 03 October 1923
Newspaper: The Bystander
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 1567 | Page: 66 | Tags: Illustrations 

BY STANDER COMMENTS: The Human Boy

... that was the end of it. A Modern Miracle Strange how environment affects the working of the mind. I shall never feel that Joseph Conrad, the master of the modern English novel, is really dead, because I first heard about it in surroundings that were entirely ...

Published: Wednesday 13 August 1924
Newspaper: The Bystander
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 1621 | Page: 8 | Tags: Illustrations 

A BOOKMAN'S GOSSIP: Lamb and Letters

... foreigner who ever lived among us, always wrote his books in French, and had them translated by his wife, an English lady. Mr. Joseph Conrad, who is a Pole, and did not acquire our language until -he had reached manhood, writes it admirably, but he some times ...

Published: Wednesday 03 May 1905
Newspaper: The Bystander
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 1802 | Page: 36 | Tags: Review 

Standing By . . .: A Weekly Commentary on One Thing and Another

... became Raja of Sara wak, in the Malayan seas. Generation after generation of Brookes rule over that wild country, and Joseph Conrad described the wonderful trust which the natives place in their white Rajas, in one of the noblest of his ten thousand noble ...

Published: Tuesday 13 February 1934
Newspaper: The Bystander
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 2111 | Page: 9 | Tags: Illustrations 

A WEEKLY LETTER FROM BLANCHE

... well a little dinner at the Carlton or somewhere than on half a scone and a small coffee at a bun shop. According to ft Joseph Conrad, in his I wonderful Chance Man, we know, cannot live by bread alone, but (1 Continued on page 3Q0) IN F.NG LAND-NOW! With ...

Published: Wednesday 20 February 1918
Newspaper: The Bystander
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 2075 | Page: 8 | Tags: Photographs 

IN ENGLAND-NOW!

... gentlemen don't think it's good for us. And then there's Mr. George Moore's Muslin, which he says is awfully clever, and a Joseph Conrad pro duction, which is sure to be, and an Anthony Hope and an E. F. Benson, and what not. It's lucky the good men are writing ...

Published: Wednesday 27 October 1915
Newspaper: The Bystander
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 2377 | Page: 9 | Tags: Illustrations