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Literature

... Roberts makes it plain tbat Lord Pauncefote las the entire regard of the American nation. In Cornhiil is a fine poem by Thomas , Hardy, The Souls of the Slain, in which the poet haars the colloquy of the souls of those slain in Africa. Sir John ; Robinson ...

THE LITHOGRAPH IN ART

... and I am designing wrappers and covers for them. The first part will contain portraits of Sir Frederick Pollock and Mr. Thomas Hardy, not on account of any inherent connection between the two, but because the drawings go well together. Also there will ...

THE MIRROR OF FASHION

... Viscount Melbourne visited Earl Grey yesterday at the Treasury. Sir James Graham, the Quarter Master General, and Admiral Sir Thomas Hardy had Intervlewa with Viscount Goderich yes- terday at the Colonial Office. Earl Grey, the Duke of Richmond, and Viscount ...

LITERARY AND OTHER NOTES

... Kafye- rine for the coming, year include a series of papers on. the peasantry of various parts of the United 1iug- dons. Mr. Thomas Hardy is to do the florsetehire Labourer, Mrs. (ilipheast the Skye C'rofter, and Mr. Justin ?? the Irish Cottier.-Mr. Stanley ...

ART AND LITERARY GOSSIP

... The book will contain. an original etching of Charles It., and ten other historical portraits. It is dedicated to Mr. Thomas Hardy. The Duke of Norfolk is beginning the restoration of the ancient choir at Arundol gene- rally called the FitzAlan Chapel ...

NEW NOVELS

... N1Ew NOVELS FAR FROM THE MADDING CROWD, by Thomas Hardy, author of A Pair of iluie Eyes, &c. (2 Vois.: Smith and Elder.)-Mr. Hardy has here more than justified the hopes which from the first we entertained of him, and which have grown greater with ...

Published: Saturday 12 December 1874
Newspaper: Graphic
County: London, England
Type: | Words: 1282 | Page: 11 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

Books Worth Reading

... Home of the Slingers, as Mr. Hardy calls it. It is a spot the romantic attractiveness of which Mr. Hardy does not exaggerate, and it is even more isolated in habit and thought than perhaps this story brings out. Mr. Hardy speaks of the central character ...

This Week's Theatres

... Salisbury, the American Ambassador, the Lord Mayor, Sir Francis Jeune and Lady Jeune, the American Consul-General, Mr. Thomas Hardy, Sir Henry Layard, Sir Arthur Sullivan, and a host of other celebrities. Among the special incidents of the evening was ...

New Novels

... best sort of all, just touched with sufficient pathos now and then. Wessex Tales: Strange, Lively, and Commonplace, by Thomas Hardy (2 vols.: Macmillan and Co.), is a title which con- tains a criticism, and one to which we must take a good deal of exception ...

Magazines

... gone, went rather tired and worn-out to the smoking-room. The men all came in-waited-smoked, and gradually slunk off.-Mr. Thomas Hardy opens in promising fashion a new serial, The Waiting Supper. The Rev. G. Huntington has an admirable double biographical ...

New Novels

... Ilus3ar, by Thomas Hardy. We cannot suppose that Lord Lorne has done his best, and we are quite stie that his colleagues have done their worst; and this is all that need be said of this notable piece of book-making. For Value Received, by Thomas Cobb (3 ...

Published: Saturday 06 September 1890
Newspaper: Graphic
County: London, England
Type: | Words: 1309 | Page: 28 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

PRINCE OF WALES THEATRE

... pinero's story might well have its place among the Lies Little Ironiesr o0 grapcll ' a humorously described by Mr. Thomas Hardy. Witc such critics we do not wgree. We umainain that Mr. Pinero has written a truly noble play that may be seen over and ...