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Leeds Mercury

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Leeds Mercury

LEEDS PATRIOTIC FUND GRAND CONCERT

... musicians rallying around him ois this charitable e- occasion, and aiding, to make successful one of the best con- p eserie-we speak of it as an oratolio perforni-iance-we hai'e ever c *e. atten ded. Defects there undoubtedly were, yet these s-ere hle of so ...

MUSICAL EVENTS

... retain dit; the gallery at the reduced price of Is. glct, ENoGISH MUSTCTANS.-O1tr contemporary the bins Athienceuisn, in speaking of some rising Frenchl musical _ pect talent, adds:- To keel) the balance true, let it be men- )r of tioned to Englaud's ...

LITERATURE

... lilt treat 'Menid'zriiuplyas aloye-s-tory, having, relations, I fas all love-stories must haive, Nvithli te enter worst. Speaking ?? uoftlselinerita offc the r' the LEosodaevavs, ''Perl, andre rearl, it grows ripen the mnind. Cuislaing hardly , -weak ...

LITERATURE

... c-eafess, 'AP whers the wit lices.' Ales l poor Samuel Popys!a IN-tSUPENSAFLE-LI\-EAND LEARN: a Guide for all who uy wish to, speak and write correctly.la Thslittl beok part _. i.e-arly Intne as a boo oreer ence for the solution of difficulties connected ...

LITERATURE

... and larne thce are measure of his owce talents, lee silgiet give us poetry which ciue vould interest ocer feclicegs aned speak to our hearts. : tice 'IThis 31r. Leathaie hal ens lic. He has culled the choicest iiO' jlowere frome his poetical garden, ...

BIRMINGHAM MUSICAL FESTIVAL

... bean ,enig Ithe composed expressly for their festivalI of 1846. The Lon2don rio, iusical critics attending this festival, speak in the most gloin, trm ofit performance on Tuesday. The solo per- ; Sties fornmers were nearly the same as at Hereford-the ...

PARIS IN AUTUMN, 1855

... muslins of St. Gall and the fine prints of Znrich. Tile East sends gorgeous tissues, A jewels, and wvek in gold il iory, to speak of its ancient civilization. Algiers shows the great variety of manufactures and agricultural productions that 1 might be expected ...

FALL OF SEBASTOPOL

... absoad the thirong InL stealthy dsiluce steals along, s Eachl kisowe iiot wh sere-on every chueek o The tale the lips refuse to speak Y L ies graved inl mach~ls lines; the glooma e Seenis pregnanat wvith thce voice of doons;- tl For shaskenL and shatt ered ...

LITERATURE

... overloekemr..--aucl fis-t -Jy 00 5 ls :3 ?? furnishes floe appropriate usselcues for the Ii'es ~1.-ew institution. ?? ?? thiss speaks of thle music in llehic the fondi, ch-!onIdI be aes ii irid. cc ed for the oject which lie advocates, amid it wE lie seems ...

THE PARIS EXHIBITION

... Ilelbh Alphens, N'ottirnghatm. ~Jahby cud Iterenluart, Xottiiighaiam. MaxMNottintghani. A Pat-is letter lea the Ttibitit,u speaks o f a yolitlt lady who received irutelligerise from the Crimea of the death of her lover, Tier father, her brother, and uncle ...

LITERATURE

... know howl Potli thme eterian statesman would treat the niouory of thle first Naipolesim iii thle reign ofhsnpe? Would lie speak out WVe boldl3y, aud while giviiig his hero credit for extraordinary, Yea aenin-, fireely con lciden II is farilts anil d truly ...

LITERATURE

... found, chiefly in the Established Church, an order of iuinds ready to re- ceive them. It would be unjust, lie asserts, to speak of these writers as rationalists ; for they takle conscience and the moral feelings to be the judge rather than reason. ...