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Place

Leeds, Yorkshire, England

Access Type

19
32

Type

51

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LITERARY ARRIVALS

... with the help of the luxurious resources which are at the command of wealth, to scamper across twenty-four States of the American Union, to say nothing of the I district of Columbia or the provinces of Ontario and Quebeo in the Dominion. The volume will ...

LITERARY ARRIVALS

... habits of birds, and has much that is fresh and pleasant to tell us about the black- bird. the thrush, and other rovinrg minstrels of hedge- row and thicket. He knows how to take snapshots of 3 birds. and his pages are filled with practical hints, wiceh ...

The Theatres

... me included a variety ofuovel acts of horsemanship; the song, a-c., of ele S outhern Minstrels, Messrs. Wooleot, Robh. bins, Park er, and Kitsg,in their American nationsli. ties and- Etbopian entertainment;I and, lastly, a splendid equestrian pageant ...

LITERARY AND ART GOSSIP

... HIIome, sweet. home ?? and other favouritee; E Hrin'sarp is a similar arrange- meut of Irish airs, among which we find The Minstrel Boy and GI ry Owen. The pieces are charming, the old airs contrast ng well. Like all the publications we have seen issued ...

MANCHESTER EXHIBITION

... 1 No. 130; The Ornitholozist, No. 131 St. Pranc.s Preaching to the Birds, No. 132* The Apothecary, No. 133; and The Minstrel's Gallery, No. 97. There are nine of Mr. Pettie's works, all hung together, warm in colour, spirited and entertaining in ...

Reviews

... civilization has, as regards a few nations, corrected this evil. The English, the Welsh, the Scotch, the Irish, and the North-Americans, now generally speak but one tongue. Mr. DUFrFYwould isolate Ireland; Ile would have his countrymen speak a language which ...

MAGAZINES AND REVIEWS

... and Uncle Sam fall short of the amazing imbecility and vulgarity of the typical Englishman and American as represented by English and American. artists. I think I am right in saying that our submission to this sort of insult is an insoluble mystery ...

Reviews

... thai I'm loved while I'm living, And be wept by fond eyes when I'm dead I Bon's Fight with the Snapping Turtle, or, the American St. George. is rich and racy, but too lengthy for extract. We must stop. Mrs. Gore's novel, Blanks and Prizes, or the Wheel ...

Reviews

... civilization has, as regards a few nations, corrected this evil. 'The English, the Welsb, the Scotch, the Irish, and the North-Americans, now generally speak but one toneue. Mr. DuFry would isolate Ireland * lie would have his countrymen speak a language which ...

LITERATURE

... bird, truly indigenous, and, J in the opinion of Benjamin Franklin, should have been s the American emblem. This splendid bird is found over all the North American continent, though it does not exist V (in a wild state) south of the Isthmus of Darien. Four ...

LITERARY ARRIVALS

... There is muo-h in its pages w liitch olher than students of music, will appreriate, , for e obtin to so to speak-, 'rom the minstrels' gallery, r s thE org-an-loft. quaint glimoces nov and then of for- satten bu t in-sirnifieznt plhases of English society ...

LITERATURE

... late revert to dust- That come Death slow, or oome Death fast, It Is but Death that comes at last Ah, well may musing Minstrel say, The honoured, fearless, and the gay, Fortune's favourites, where are they ? Yes Fortune's favourite8 BUsr, till then- ...