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C3RNHILL

... Employees, too, are good to eat, Wno, at their latest minute, No longer fit to dye the meat, Will numb their death within it. Thomas Hardy moralise* over the vandalism of church restoration, a subject which has its humours as well as its art tragedies. He blames ...

A THOUSAND PRAHA OP HISTORY

... records ; in 185] the foundation- stone was of the Record Office. Here, according to no less an aathority than Sir Thomas Duffas Hardy, who spent sixty are boused W the Book, and ‘countless papers which have in t r ume thrilled Parliaments and Governments ...

PERIODICALS RECEIVED

... monthly parts at the popular price of sixpence. The “Cornhill” for April opens with a lvrie of great charm from the pen of Thomas Hardy. The customary instalment of Anthony Hope's Intrusions of Peggy is followed by a second article in the series entitled ...

Published: Saturday 29 March 1902
Newspaper: Highland News
County: Inverness-shire, Scotland
Type: Illustrated | Words: 907 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

BY THE WAY

... crowd is so frequentlyused in the picturesque use of the English language, that one is apt to forget the author of it. Mr Thomas Hardy, the popular novelist, was thirtyfour when he produced the story so named, in which the humour and pathos of agricultural ...

rii7T IE4

... well worth the twopence the publisher has the courage to charge in these days of the universal penny. A serial story by Thomas Hardy (the first since his great work, Tess of the D'Urbervilles); also stories by Robert Louis Stevenson, A. Cohan Doyle, ...

LITERATURE

... new novel, which is begun by Thomas Hardy. Per it would be more to call it a series of novels, as thet is the form which it has hitherto borne. Ove of the st ries is comic, the other par takes of the pature of a y Mr Hardy with teasure is always toteresting ...

THE NORTHERN CHRONICLE, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 18, 1888

... supewitition current amons the peasantry, and with e tragic segued It is not difficult to detect in the story the pen of Mr Thomas Hardy, the novelist. Ir is rid that Miss Braddoe awns 04500 each novel she writes, sod ber custom is to publish two a year. Ma ...

THE NORTHERN CHRONICLE, i:TEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 3l, 1894

... neoweity of making way for the splendour of the Christmas number nest month. In it we ars to have the fins part of a Doi el by Thomas Hardy, and those who have reed his former works will look forward to it with pleasure. ' Graham's Voice' is an amusing little ...

LITERARY NOTES

... W►lter Crane—illustrated by himself—Mr J. H. Shorthouse, and Mr W. Goree ; and last, but certainly not least, a story by Mr Thomas Hardy. CHICIICR, the author of those immensely popular Studies from Homer, kn., is about to give to the public a book of ...

NEL: NEW GIF BOOKS. THE BOYS’ BOOK OF HOW IT.1S MADE, ARCHIBALD WILLIAMS, ‘Se 6p. Companion Volume to it, _

... Pater, “ Nineteenth Oentery,” Marquis, of Lorne (Duke of Hall Geine, Ian Maclaren,’ Crockett, Professor ” | Marie Qorelli, Thomas Hardy, Sir A. Conan Doyle, | Magazine,” T. P. O'Conner, Mr H: Ward, James Lane Allev, Rider wo rear, Tee *&o In book fi | than ...

THE NORTHERN CHRONICLE, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 11, 1888

... Tits review of William Barnes' Life in the Athenerunt is from the pen of his neighbour and friend, Mr Thomas Hardy, the well-known novelist. Mr Hardy complains of some local inaccuracies, and paints out the interesting fact that there is no evidence that ...

THE NORTHERN CHRONICLE, wEDisit.SDAY, DECEMBER 5, 1894

... festive, and is moat seasonsble in the last month of the year. Among the more noticeable of the contents is the 6r.t pint of Thomas Hardy 's novel. entitled The Simpletons.' The scene is laid in the author's favoured Weever, about which he bss already written ...