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THE ART OF SPEAKING

... ultimate In ill success. The moment they try to speak, all tlseir asfeelings, thoughts, facts, and purposes, either crowd to the tongue or fly altogether, and leave it d.utterly bankrupt of words. Those who can speak r asdo 'not often hring credit on the gift ...

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR. THE CHKAFB3T FOOD KNOWN. 811,-Dr in kit popular work, speaking on diet, says cnsii* or ..

... LETTERS TO THE EDITOR. THE CHKAFB3T FOOD KNOWN. 811,-Dr in kit popular work, speaking on diet, says cnsii* or Indian meal very - nutritious, and the cheapest food known. Ia It preferred floor. I gate , t trial by a qusrter a stone at and found product ...

POETRY

... Lord, oh speak ! thy servant bears: For I'm thy Servant, and B'll still be so: Speak words of Comfort in my willing Ears; And since my Tongue is in thy praises slow, And since that thino all Rhetorick exceeds, Speak thou in words, but let me speak in deeds ...

POETRY

... POETRY. SPEAK NO ILL. Nay, speak tIo ill: a kindly word Can never leave a sting behind; And, oh! to breath each tale we've heard, Is far beneath a noble mind. Full oft a better seed is sown, By choosing thus the kinder plan; For if but little good be ...

POETRY

... POETRY. SPEAK NOT HARSHLY. Speak not harshly: much of care Every hnunan heart must bear; Enough of shadows sadly play Aronnd the very sunniest way; Enough of sorrows darkly lie Veiled withiD the merriest eye. By the childhoods gushing tears By the griefs ...

POETRY

... POE TRY. THE DEAF GIRL. ANNE A. FRCMONT. He speaks to them God's word, For all are fix'd in mete attention now, Anid not a lip is stirr'd, But joy bits smiling on each gentle brow. And o'er eaph cheek has stol'n a brighter hue- Oh ! that I could but hear ...

POETRY

... The love I have for thee; For fate forbids my tongne should tell How dear thou art to me. II. Thou eanst not kosow, I cannot speak, The nogaish that I feel, By namrsing in my heart a love I never may reveal. IIn. For thoughl I've toiled to fix moy feet On ...

Literary Notices

... utterance. All men, bellmen and hawkers excepted, speak much more than they spout. Indeethere are numbers-we do not allude to ladies of eburse-wlto tnever speak ia. publir, 'and yet possess a capacity of speaking in private 'whicho is absolutely boundless ...

POETRY

... the serf to-day dare stand these Islemen of the West ? Speak ! from your bristling sides, ye ships, as Nelson spoke before- Speak ! whilst the world is waiting for your thunder burst of yore; Speak !r whilst your Islemen stand besides each hot and smoking ...

POETRY

... POETY.| BEAUTY OF W-rINTEtR. TErY speak of summer's brilliant day, - And varm, unclouded night. They speak of summer's glowing sky So deeply blue and bright- They speak of summer's woodland walks So wild and green and sweet, With arching trees above our ...

LITERATURE

... preliminaries to the d he art of speaking. His chief advice in regard to reading v e is that the reader should understand what the author A a means, and seek to give expression to the meaning. In ir A, regard tito speaking, his advice may he summarised as ...

MR GLADSTONE AND THE ZULU WAR

... the effect that in consequence of the right lion, gentleman's personal friendship for Sir Kartle Frere, had retrained from speaking in the House Commons against the policy of the in reference to the Zulu war, he has replied that there is not the slightest ...