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POETRY

... Whose heart may prove true to the end. We none of us know one another, And oft into error we fall; Then let us speak well of our brother, Or speak not about him at all. A smile or a sigh may awaken Suspicion most false and undue: And thus our belief may be ...

Literature

... this work simply to impart to his readers some hints on the art of speaking, but in the course of his periormnance be became Bo imspressedt with the conviction that the power of speaking well wan indissolubly connected with ability to read and write well ...

NEW BOOKS AND NEW EDITIONS

... much in the larguiiage itself as in the fact that speaking is not taught in a systematic matnner on scientific principles. People learn sinlging, but speaking is supposed to come by nature, and the speaking voice is therefore left to be formed by acci- dent ...

Books of Reference

... 891 g - numbered 1,776,405 soulst.- Of e' .-7-59A4i6. are put down as English . speaking; .5O8f3~~6 a:'Welsh-speaking; 402,253 as speaking both -languaes; 3,076 as. speaking other languages; and 9°791 as infants, while 12,833 made no return. It is interesting ...

Poetry

... Qsestioss. a k To speak, or not to speak ?-that is the question- Whether 'twere wiser on my part to suffer This odious Popish bill to pass the Lords, b Or make a noble stand against the measure, F And by opposing, crush it. To speak ?-To speak?- c And by that ...

THE GRAVE

... unnamed- ( And then-the eternity before thou wort. a 'Thou speak'st the voice thou heard'st at nature's birth, t When even the very ends of space were awed; v And till th'archangel's trump shalt thou speak forth, Croation's echo of the voice of God. Wirkdale ...

A DRASTIC IiiSHOV

... A DRASTIC IiiSHOV. me Bishop of Sodor and Man, speaking on Thursday at a Church conference at Douglas, men- tioned with satisfaction the announcement made by tbe archbishops that the bishops had unanim- ously resolved against the ceremonial use of :t- ...

Mr. TOM TAYLOR and the DRAMA in LEEDS

... community. (Hear, hear.) And he said this in Leeds, knowing that he was speaking in the teeth ui the prejudice of a powerful and influential body among them; knowing that he was speaking in the presence of a Proprietor of the principal paper amongst them ...

Published: Sunday 13 July 1873
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1087 | Page: 4 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

THE ENGLISH SUNDAY AT THE PARIS EXHIBITION

... English exhibitors at the Exhibition the religious observance of the Sunday. The effort made was to induce every English-speaking ex- hibitor to withdraw all attendance, abstain from aI ex- hibition, and to refuse to have anything to do with busi. ness ...

POETRY

... Ago is wisdom :-ThikioTm Spea'k in rime ! don't lingcr, pausing on the brink; Be your purpose worthy-utter what you think. sometimes a word Nvill saive, thon sileuce is a crime- The best tboughts lack atuse k ept secret :-Speak in Time! Act in Time I reflect ...

LITERARY NOTICES

... apologises for it, telling us that he has drunk so deep into' Bazlo and authors of his school that he has 4learned to speak as they speak and write as they wlite. We are sorry, if the author was dietrustf ul of his powers of original composition, that he ...