Refine Search

Date

1900 - 1949
29 1900-1909

Newspaper

Freeman's Journal

Countries

Place

Dublin, Dublin, Republic of Ireland

Access Type

29

Type

29

Public Tags

More details

Freeman's Journal

INCORPORATED SOCIETY OF MUSICIANS

... ace pitch there, which approxi- mated very closely to that known. as the diapa- son, normal. Mr Cumumings then vent on to speaK of the action which he had ta!ken in re- ference to the subject of pitch, and stated that as. a result of the action taken ...

LITERATURE

... continually the lack of something closelv in touch With nature, because tile most French of all FrensehusIen bad forgotten how to speak. The Revolution has made them ; and to this dav the heirs of the Itepubl c wonder at the peasan:. in his resurrection. Froin ...

FASHION AND VARIETIES

... person. More- over, it is quite unjustifiable for a ?? per- son to make use of such expressions aS we and ?? oar when. speaking of Irish people and affairs. ?? an Irish person Iam opposed to the Pan- ?? movement, but cannot understand how : your co ...

FASHION AND VARIETIES

... inherit and thereby frequently suffe!r. I M1 make this charge not on behalf of tlose who belong to those communities, were I to speak in A3 their name I should render to England their most hearty thanks for having by the intolerant M. course which she has pursued ...

[ill]

... 'lin Memoriams | ye perhap s the greatest of Tenny-sot's poem.- is Ir Pervaded. to the faith, confident and serene, that tl spe~aks in the sinp e. peanefnl stanzas, Cross- ir ii.i tha Bar: el Twilight and evening bell, Antd after that the dark, NV And may ...

THE IRISH LITERARY THEATRE

... imiperishaleaP t is liue!.Plys and novels are, I think for the re a- mon= obut the bock I speak, of would he thle In isbegirnng tif -eatr . nbook of the kind- aL I speak of is the barettiug need of the moment, of cad wctuld he more lnelp to the rehabilitation ...

THE ZOO

... over the iniqui- ties of Lhe Rhodesian war-gang was certainly a audacious. I; was ?? audacious to e claim, in doing so, to speak in t-he interests a of the Catholics of the British Empire, or even of Great Britain. The Catholics of the ;Empire and of Great ...

LITERATURE

... askeil, a hundred become Prll:estants to ten ho bhecotne Roman Cathli 's 7 No, he said, the other way. When some one was speaking of thhe lautifal ruins of an old Irish cathe- dral. he s'fd, iI wish cat all the old Irish : aathedrals were pulled down ...

A CELTIC THEATRE

... binioc-the Brtebn bag-,. s Pipes. At teo o'cloclk the performance began. It was acm se All who 'have seen r' fhse pesant ats speak of them with won- eder and admirmtion Even the rough boys 1w h plyed the femalb charamters showed an eztraerdinary dramatic ...

LITERATURE

... The wvicke Insahwoman is at the moment busy wriia a frying-pan. Look here, I said. 'it is the heroic English- man that speaks. Please attend o me (I noted in an aside of attention to myself tha-v the tonte of my voice was; one which I had never heard ...

THE PARIS EXHIBITION

... prircipla, bllt to the details of the reso5u- t tiorna. On the main resolution in favour of Y 'bilingual instruction in Irish-speaking di-, e tricts there was absolute unaniitv. But in 'the diseuss~on which preceded the resolo- I tions the general view was ...

THE SPRING SHOW

... E~ngineering CO .1 bet, 21 and 22 ltahelor's wlk, and under the guidance and supervision of their engineers. T ahis inself speaks well ipr the 20igh class .amminerylan4 wormnamship for whim ti firm am so noted. TO-DAY'S PffMOCFT1ffb. A mnnlitarv band wil ...