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The Examiner

THE THEATRICAL EXAMINER

... is called general '-business is not only excellent nightly, but an overflow- ing attendance at Mr and Mrs Kean's benefit showed specially the esteem in which their exertions are held. At the OLYxPic another deservedly favorite English performer, Miss ...

THE SOCIETY OF FRENCH ARTISTS

... important work. This artist shows several excellent designs for pictures, painted in oil, and several extraordinarily powerful flower-pieces. Of the former, The Source (92) and A Sketch (99), and of the latter, Flowers (86), are especially noteworthy ...

THE EXAMINER

... ROYAL ACADEMY SUPPLEMENT THE ROYAL ACADEMY. FOURTH GALLERY. (NO. 292tS 381.) 293. FLORIE. Arthur Hacker. A pretty portrait showing promise. 294. JOCELINE JOLIFFE SENDING .PH(EBE MAYFLOWER DOWN TO THE LODGE. - Chas. Landseer, R.A. Stupen- .dously- bad. Drawing ...

EDUCATIONAL BOOKS

... illustrative of the country mapped, or references to the maps showing its colonial possessions. On the face of general maps, as of Europe, are engraved the references to the special maps showing the several countries. This excellent school atlas is made ...

THE SOCIETY OF BRITISH ARTISTS

... that Mr P. Macnab con- tributes under the title Scanty Shelter (17); and Mr C. Bauerle's Flowers (105) is a praiseworthy study of a girl and flowers. In Chancery (50), by Mr C. A. Calthorp-a flight of steps and a terrace, over- grown with weeds ...

THE OLD MASTERS EXHIBITION

... Reynblds's unrivalled power of mental characterisation; and in the Portrait of Lady Anne Lennox (77) we have a work which shows not only his mastery over a commonplace type of countenance, but also his extraordinary skill, as a colourist. This latter ...

THE EXAMINER

... 'gainst sin; And, tho' sad memories wake, and bitter thoughts will rise, 'Tis but our destiny. No flower that blooms but-dies, Yet, budding fresh next year, shows an unerring sign That from tears in seventy-eight, spring joys in seventy-nine. eLABOIUCHERE ...

THE THEATRICAL EXAMINER

... for next year. In the Mathematical Section Mr Glaisher related some experiments which he had made in the Captive Balloon at Chelsea. He stated that at every hundred feet up to a thousand he had been entirely confirmed in his previous observations on the ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... (ice! ice ! the freshest and the coolest!) Chocolate, vanilla, coffee, rose ice, and, best of all. flower-blossom ! Who Will taste my delicious ice, flower-blossmu!' These names he had invented himself for the different sorts of ice. 'Yes, my ice has a ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... briefless barrister upon the curse of a small private income that keeps from him the blessing of a necessary toil. the story shows how the lively strength of her character attracts him in spite of himself, and how the tenderness of her character becomes ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... stimulus which came to Burns in open woods and fields would only perplex your artificial flower-maker in verse. The highest aim of the latter is to marshal his conceits, to show his technical skill. He is certainly an artist; but so is a hairdresser, and so also ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... around a man, who showed that he fully entered into the spirit of the poem, which describes the Christian enterprise to deli- ver Jerusalem. Although he was a cripple, his shoulders resting on crutches, which he conld not flourish ' to show how fields were ...