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Charles Knight's Town & Country Newspaper

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Charles Knight's Town & Country Newspaper

POPULAR MUSIC

... (subject from Genesis). By Miss H LINDSAY; dedicated to Miss Dolby. Beautifully illustrated, 2s. 6d. • also, Excelsior and Speak Gently. Is. Gd. earls; a Psalm of Lie atd Pula3ki, vocal duets, Is. each, all by Miss Lindsay. Loudon, ROBERT COCKS &Co.. New ...

übiicOutstions

... übiicOutstions. This is true liberty, when free-born men, llavittg to advise the public, may speak free. Dint PIDES. ...

gly TIME IS

... found could be no way so well done as one—which was, to make a head of brass; and if he could make this head to speak, and hear it when it speaks, then might he be able to wall all England about with brass. The veracious history goes on to tell us that the ...

WHO ARE THE KNOW-NOTHINGS

... degrading things of literature were always addressed to coteries—the highest, to the - people. To you, I say, go on and prosper. Speak •to the rightminded, and never lower . .yourself to grossness and ignorance, whether in. high life or low. Editor. But how ...

10

... have abandoned the field for this season. Their old chief,. Millais, alone is here, and he has gone over to the enemy: or, to speak in parliamentary language, he appears inclined to treat his followers after the fashion of a political chieftain: having by ...

ALCOHOL

... proved that man acquires his notions of the solidity of near bodies, by seeing pictures of different sides of them (so to speak) with his two eyes, and by combining these unlike pictures into one by an act of mind. An esteemed friend writes, Allow me ...

THE WAR, AND THE NEGOTIATIONS

... amount of sacrifice. But let us be compelled to maintain immense armies and fleets—to have the police-force of war, so to speak, constantly kept on foot—at the cost of double taxation, of loans, .of negotiations, of carrying on the game of diplomacy without ...

gi2e Nrayqtgi

... , to Time is. We shall narrow our Questions to things of the day. Our Head, we must premise, is rather given to plain. speaking; but if he does not blush himself, he will call up no blush on the cheek of others. We proceed at once to our dialogue. ...

Tilt NEW WAVERLEY NOVEL

... except that the knight speaks affected English, and the Scotch men and women plain English. But to a person ignorantly attempting what he thought would pass as an imitation of Scott, it would occur to make King John, of England, speak English, and Malcom ...

[WEEKLY.]

... greatness, and even our national existence. The Ministers and the press were misleading the people, and it behoved the House to speak with the voice of authority in this hour of peril; and, by a faithful and just policy, to restore tranquillity to Europe, and ...

Outlines of ify

... wrought in the tone and temper of the Commons of England within a brief fortnight ! Before Whitsuntide there was little plain-speaking. Reserve and mystification, born of infirm purposes, seemed prepared to battle with the honest convictions and self-reliant ...