THE ENGLISH REVIEW.-
... Moore, give lightness to the literary contents, which include, besides some excellent minor verse, the continuation of Joseph Conrad's Under ‘Vestern Eyes. ...
... Moore, give lightness to the literary contents, which include, besides some excellent minor verse, the continuation of Joseph Conrad's Under ‘Vestern Eyes. ...
... THE BEST IN CURRENT LITERATURE U»4er Westcn Ey*» (II) By JOSEPH CONRAD Tk Oiborsc RmhtiM By SIDNEY WEBB Tk I risk Demand By J. SWIFT MACNEILL, K.C., M.P. Tk Dark tk Seucts By BERNARD SHAW Pam Niglit* (HI) By ARNOLD BENNETT THE ENGUSH REVIEW POETRV.-uuima ...
... deftnitely identified as that -Peter the Painter.’ —Exchange Co. The BEST Current Literature. Under West Eyes (ii.). By JOSEPH CONRAD. The Osborne Revolution. By SIDNEY WEBB. The Irish Demand. By J. SWIFT MacNEILL, K»Ca| RlaPa The Dark Lady of the Sonnets ...
... THE BEST IN CURRENT LITERATURE Imlep Western Eyes af.). By JOSEPH CONRAD. The Osbomc Revelation. By SIDNEY WEBB. The Irish Dc-manti. By J. SWIFT HACNEUX, K.C.. M.P. The Dark Lady of the Sonnets. By BERNARD SHAW. Piri- Nights By ARNOLD BENNETT. THE ENGLISH ...
... Paurenc. Biny _ , the Hon. Victoria Lady Welby, and Thomas Burke, and contributions by Maurice Hewlett, T. Sturge Moore, Joseph Conrad, Sidney Webb (“The Osborne Judgment ), and Harold Temperly (“The Referendum ), while Mr. Swift Mac Neill, M.P., writes ...
... modern English writers, I should point to live which I read with undiminished pleasure over and over again to Youth, by Joseph Conrad They That Walk in Darkness, by Israel Zangwill The Star, by H. G. Wells They, by Rudyard Kip ling and Matrimony, by ...
... the language The Willows. By Algernon Black wood The Drums of the Fore and Aft. By Rudyard Kipling Youth A Narrative. By Joseph Conrad, have no love or sex interest, and I have also read some powerful short stories by Morley Roberts of which the same may ...
... over bring the message of peace? For myself I not believe those messages, and 1 not need them. I cannot believe them. As Joseph Conrad says; T cannot believe that our dear, pitiful, august dead are the mercy of the incantations of Pallsdino and Mrs. Piper ...
... little sketch by Mrs. H. G. Was, analysing the experiences of a woman about to commit suicide. In Under 'Western Eyes Mr. Joseph Conrad oontinues a story characterised by the customary vig our and picturesqueness cf his style. MY ...
... reading of the Bible, a sketch by R. B. Cuninghame Graham, a short story by Flora Annie Steel, an instalment of a serial by Joseph Conrad, and other good stuff, including a vigorous editorial protest against the censoring of Cottage Pie. Mr. Harris's reminisce ...
... Ilewlett's gossip about fairie•:. and the quaint humour of Mr. Willcocks's rural courting scenes In Cupid's Garden.•' Mr. Joseph Conrad continues Under Western Eyes, and a number which has many good thing concludes with freshly written reviews of the books ...
... Mond. Mr. Frank Harris gives his recollections of talks with Renan, and Mr. Maurice Hewlett has a paper On Fairies. Mr. Joseph Conrad continues Under Western Eyes, his remarkable study of Russian revolutionary life, and there are stories by Mr. Richard ...