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LITERARY NOTES, NEWS, AND ECHOES

... a banquet given by the Socialists to some French delegates, at the Holborn Restaurant. One of the speakers, I remember, assured the intelligent foreigners that all the best English talent of the day was included in the Socialist ranks. In art, he said ...

ART NOTES

... ohe and'obly art critic begins by finding grounds for his faith in the fact thatMatthewArnoldand Ruskin acclaimed the aged Socialist as a master-builder amongnovelists a an odd bit of reasoning surely! The wonder is that anybody cares what Tolstoy writes ...

REVIEWS

... REVI EWS. A STUDY IN SOCIALISM.* TiEsSr is no particular reason why a novel about Socialists should be dull any more than a novel about Mayfair or Gaiety girls. Socialists, we have alw ays been lcd to believe, have their amusing idiosyncrasies, and certainly ...

THREE VOLUMES OF VERSE.*

... admire their honesty and the force with which they are put. The company is supposed to consist of two ladies, a rhymer, a Socialist, the chaplain, the doctor who writes the record, and the reader, who, however, does not take the chair allotted to him, but ...

LITERARY NOTES, NEWS, AND ECHOES

... weekly paper which he has conducted for some years in the interests of Socialism. It was called the official organ of the Socialistic League, of which Mr. Morris was the founder and is the head. Mr. H. H. Sparling, the assistant editor, is also sacrificed ...

OLD AND NEW TRADE UNIONISM

... that the work has been practically rewritten, and he takes the opportunity of having a fling at the New Unionism and the Socialists: the former for palliating intimidation and violence, the latter for denouncing trade unionism and co-operation when. ever ...

THE STRIKE AT ARLINGFORD AT THE OPERA COMIQUE

... episodes it would seem a coninouplace attair enoughi. We should wear', listeningN to the narrative o! the too faouriliar young Socialist and poet, ihe too t'amiliar patrician lady, of the too ?? furign nobleman, of the too familiar daughter of the people. h'le ...

HAMLET AT A MATINEE

... believed, faithfully regard them., A SOCIALIST'S VIEW OF THE DEPTFORD ELECTION. Mrs. A\nie Besant has been strongly urged to speak at Deptford against Mr. Blunts canliclature, but, although the request came from the Socialist and advanced Radicais with whom ...

REVIEWS OF BOOKS

... joined in song. There a few scenes where a htrunger is influenced with such strong contagion by his surroundings as in a Socialist meeting Al is simpse and unaffected. The charm acts partiularlyupon the young, and it is an indisputable fact that0the najority ...

MR. WALTER BESANT'S NEW NOVEL.*

... locksmith, a plumber. and a mason (happy man 1) and the other, a conceited board school teacher, an outrageous cad and a Socialist, who is duly exposed and sat upon. Lady Mildred, finding Claude, the college Fellow, to be every inch a genltleman, and having ...

REVIEWS

... 'was the ?? of the winter cour-se, and found illustration by the mouth of the following variety of parson: the Christian Socialist, the historical expert, tile Liberationist, the Church defender, the Church reformrc. 'IThese lectures are nOV published ...

AMUSEMENTS IN EDINBU

... Thursday; and to-night (Saturday), The in Lady of Ltons will be produced. One-act sketches e, ntitled Comrplications and A Socialist, have been Aplayed as curtain-raisers on alternate evenings. The C. company includes Mr Arthur Bearne, who has appeared ...

Published: Saturday 16 November 1895
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1436 | Page: 7 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture