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Birmingham, Warwickshire, England

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SIR JAMES GRAHAM AT CARLISLE

... for having the trust conferred Upon me of being one of the reprosentrtirvos of this, ancient, city, and I ane sure that 1 speak, for'my colleague and myself when I statethat, ab some cost, i ha. been satisfactory to us to demonstrate thd purity of the' ...

SUTTON COLDFIELD AND ART EDUCATION

... to i the e penditure proposed. (Hear, hear.)-CodncilloT Edwards supported the proposal of the Coancil.- Alderman Walters, speaking in support of the 'proped school, said that Mr. Turner had generously offered tbeh land upon which the school could be built ...

HELEADERS OF THIS WONDROUS WORLD

... all Wihl lift tile burden from The losons oif the vetik, In highist splheres of liheasure breathe, Ill b ightest lahiguagc speak ! iTeY lislh thc deep and baurniinig trntlhs Of love to, all litaiiand ; Allil, gent-like, pi :c spalenditd light Aboiut the ...

STAGE SCENERY AND SCENE-PAINTING

... January number of the Magazine of Art caon,- tains an interesting article on Theatrical Scenery, from the pen of one who speaks with the greatest. authority on the subject-viz., Mr. William Telbin. We extract some of the more notable passages:-x Scenery ...

MRS. KATHERINE'S LANTERN

... nose)- Pray, air, take the old thing back. I've no taste for ,ricabrac. Please to mark the letters twain- (Pm supposed to speak again)- Graven on the lantern pane. Can you tell rue who was she, Mistress of the flowery wreath, And the anagram beneath- ...

NATIONAL SOCIETY OF MUSICIANS

... education, they should apply for a portion to p romote instrumental music.-Mr. Stratton (Birmingham) made an amusing speech in speaking of the state of music in his town. They had begun there to solve the question for themselves. They had a large class for ...

A LEGITIMATE ACTOR

... Shakespeare as the player as well as the poet, Can so grossly violate common senea and good taste too. Does Ur. Sullivan 'speAk the speech trippingly en the tongue?' No, but he ' mouths it,' as too nany of our players do. Does he not 'saw the air too ...

LITERATURE

... through many weary years, have had much to do with her father's sanotity. Now and then, as he looks up from his writing to speak a kind word -to his child, you see In his countenance a massive strength -and awinning gentleness, the simplicity of childhood ...

THE REV. HENRY BONNER'S SERMONS

... experienw. in the form of an outward history. There is nothing; strange in this. It is a way of speaking about spiritul; things hbtusl vith Christ. He is always speaking in, parableandmetaphor. Tlhestory of the'Temntationisa: story like Bunyan's Pilgrim's Progress ...

NEW BOOKS

... I now speak, he says, of a quality of mizd which I know I possess, and which has bet, a very serious drawback to me through te whole of my career. I maean a sort of mode'st vanity, or self-reliance, or self-esteem, which has caused me to speak of my ...

MR. E. BURNE-JONES'S DIES DOMINI

... bolew the result achieved to discover the rveanms of its aecomnplisl- mnent, To all who view it rightly this picture will speak in language rnori eloquent tihan word-, even than woreds of son, of the Divine love. lims in its petrfect drawing and its wondrous ...

THE DEAN OF LINCOLN AND THE STAGE

... | TIE DE OF LINCOLN AND THE STAGE. Speaking at a dramatic entertainment given bv the hbovs of the Lincoln Diocesan School. on the occasion of !the distribution of prizes on Tuesday night, the Dean of Lincoln Far. I1ucleri said sometimes he had heard ex- ...