QUR LIBRARY COLUMN coNTEMPOARY NOVELISTS 10—Thomas Hardy ‘Conducted by the Borough Librarian. ) B
... QUR LIBRARY COLUMN coNTEMPOARY NOVELISTS 10—Thomas Hardy ‘Conducted by the Borough Librarian. ) B ...
... QUR LIBRARY COLUMN coNTEMPOARY NOVELISTS 10—Thomas Hardy ‘Conducted by the Borough Librarian. ) B ...
... KING'S MOVEMENTS. TO-DAY'S PRIVY COUNCIL. The King this morning received at Marlborouegh House Sir William Crookes and Mr. Thomas Hardy, and personally invested them with the order of merit. ; s His Majesty subsequently held a Privy Council, at which the ...
... of loctures, o * Pressot Lay Novelists,” Mr. Lovs V Wilkinson. MA, last night dealt with th works and bitenury carver of Thomas Hardy _ The lecturs are onganised by the Umvamaty Extonson (omnmitee held at the Litorary and Philosaphical Le ture Hall. There ...
... WHICH HARDY? Concerning Max Cate, Dorchester, ihe house of Mr. Thomas Hardy, there is an interesting story told. The land upon whick it is built belonged to a private company, of which the late King Edward, then Prince of Wales, was a member When Mr. ...
... “THOMAS HABDY AND HIS WESSEX,” Litarary studerts and readers of Thomas Hardy would find in last night's Sunday Lecture a subject. which could not fal to atiract thamn, The consequence was that in B eok T s Moy B Wwas cro out. . Wik and bis Wessex,” or ...
... Pinero, Sir Evelyn Wood, Lord Beauchamp, Lord Bristol, Mr. Justice Darling, Lord Falmouth, Lord Haldane, Lord Halsbury, Mr. Thomas Hardy, and a number of Koyal Academicians and Associates of the Royal Academy. | The report which follows we are enabled to give ...
... ITEMS OF GENERAL INTEREST FACTORY HAND'S FASCINATION. WORKING CLASS READERS O} THOMAS HARDY in the oourse o 1 Thomas Hardv. in 1 Haslam | whiel \n Appreciative Sketch” of Mr. Milleate Monthly,”” Mr. James oncerning the following writer ’ has among the ...
... Speaker Lowther shows the greatest range by including Richard Strauss, a mere musician ; Ernest Haeckel, a mere philosopher ; Thomas Hardy, a mere novelist ; J. S. Sergeant, a mere artist; and Professors Metchinkoff and Rayleigh, mere chemists. He finds twenty ...
... in 1860, and cducated at Dumf:ies Academy and Edinburgh Un:versity. W hat Jobn Galt did one hundred years ago, sved what Thomas Hardy has done for Southern England, J M. Barric has done for the Scottish peasant life of to-day. A great emotional power, a ...
... recesses of the soul of his hery - beroine. But it is not given to €Very mar to be & Scott, a Dickens, a Thackeray, o | Thomas Hardy in telling his story, - Hild Lessways” is the story iy full deta; of the career of a woman, Just as “(lay hanger” was the ...
... Dorset, presents a variety of life, character, and scenery, which nowadays is al too rare. This portion of England which Thomas Hardy has so vividly described to the enchantment of thousands, invites attention and study like some beautiful Jow-toned picture ...
... son of a miner at St. Helens Jolbery, Durham. At Dorchester vesterday evening in the presence of a large gathertng Mr. Thomas Hardy wae presented with the frecdam of the borough in recognition of his brilliant services to literature, About £12,000 has ...