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SPEAK BOLDLY!

... Prophet ! Let thy tongue Speak fearles, for thie Vords aro thiMs- Words that by 1ioruiilg stars wvere eug, And angels hflyhinoa in strains divine. t Speak bodidvi Poet ! LJt thy pen Be nerved with fire that may not die; t 'Speak for the rights of ?? rnels ...

PLAIN SPEAKING.*

... chapter about Capri, another about St. Cloud; and one very short story. 'The title, Plain Speaking, applies naturally to the social essays, Plain speaking is generally understood to mean calling a spade a spade, and a very unpleasant sort of thing ...

SPEAK NO ILL

... SPEAK NO ILL. Speak not harshly of a neighbour, Even if you've seeming cause; Undervalue no one's labour; Be it friend's, or be it foe's. Cherish kind and noble feelings- Friendship is not all a name; Least said, aye, is soonest mended- Blacken not ...

SPEAK KINDLY

... SPEAK NINDLY. Sneak kindly to thyv fellow manl, Npho droops froml Veight of w;oe I th inks beneath deep sorrow's ban. Wvith ain s thou canst not know is Oh I klifdiY speak, for deadly grief fto Isgaigat his heart; t It mav be thine to give reliTf, it ...

SPEAK GENTLY

... SPEAK GENTLY. Spealk gentlv-it is better far To rule by love than fear - Speak gently-lct not harsh words mar The good wve might do hero. Speak gent!v-love doth E hisper low The hearts that true love binds; And gently friendship's accents flow, Affection's ...

IF THOU BUT SPEAK

... IF THOU BUT SPEAK. If thou hut speak, the chattering brooklet, ever Wasting in idle gossip with the flo wers Tlle sweet long hours of .9unmier thit ?? never Come back to us-the long sweet hours- Forgets it- story to give thought to thine, Forgets all ...

IF THOU BUT SPEAK

... IF THOU BUT SPEAK. If thou but speak, the chattering brooklet, ever Wasting in idle goesip with the flowers The sweet long hours of sumnmer that can never Come back again to us-the long sweet hours- Forgets its story to gitve thought to thine, Forgets ...

SINGING AND SPEAKING

... SINGING AND SPEAKING. BY ALFRED AUGUSTUS NoRmT. London: North's Academy, 23, York-place, Portman-square, W. A Practical Guide for Training Singers and Speakers is what Professor North's new book pur- ports to be. The author claims that his method ...

Published: Saturday 17 June 1899
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1500 | Page: 20 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

SPEAKING POTTERY

... SPEAKING POTTERY AN interesting an.] important characteristic of the pot-house pottery of a hundred and fifty years ago was the literature which adorned it. In the taverns and alehouses of the eighteenth century it was the custom to decorate the mugs ...

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 ...

SEQUAH SPEAKS

... I C;SEQUAH SPEAKS. I | rnder this esiking headingwe pblisb stead vet. tisent to-day which is likely to attract consider- able attention in this city and neighbourhood. Modern ingenuity and experience have proved almadantly that whatever appeals to the ...

THE VOICE IN SPEAKING AND SINGING

... THE VOICE IN SPEAKING AND SINGING. TnE second of the series of lectures in connectior with the Ladies' Collegiate School was delivered it Ist night in presence of a large audience by 1r,. i Walter Buck, Professor of Singing and Vocat r Physiolo,,. ...