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A Female Army Doctor

... Eng. land, and itfwas in each case expected that orders would come oit,.o, deal with him promptly and ievezelyI hutfor-some mystrious terason no orders of any kind ever eaine bank. Once he was. ca'led in the night to do what he could for a woman who was ...

THE CRUSADERS' SONG

... the Iland for the people! CHtOR US. The land ! The land ! 'Twas God who gave the land The land ! I The land The ground whereon we stand i Why should we be beggars, with the ballot in our haad God gave the land ...

THE DRAMA

... at the hands of a certain woman in the piece, who is very much in the hero's way. She b is his -wife, a bad woman whom ho has married in the i wild days of his youth. 8elieving her'to be dead, he c eas married another woman, the heroine of the piece, ...

THE REVOLT OF MAN.*

... to upset the rule of woman, and to this end she has all along been training Lord Chester, who, as a scion of the old house, is to be placed at the head of the movement; so when she carries him off it is only to take him through Woman's England and to ...

A SHOW OF ANCIENT SHOON

... collection, there is nothing to remind one of the flippant and elegant woman of the world. The above are only a very fewv specimens of the multitude from wbich the nroverbial old woman might choose were she so minded, and we advise our readers to pay a visit ...

OLD DECCAN DAYS

... Now, the tiger overheard the old woman's lamentation, and wondered what sort of a thing that perpetual dripping could be which was feared more than the most ferocious wild beast. And listening, he heard the old woman drag, drag her furniture about from ...

SOLDIERS ON STILTS

... London, that he follows a young woman, whom he has just seen escape from a house besieged' by the guardians of the law. He follows her' on board a ship; and is landed with her somewhere on the French coast. The young woman ultimately proves to be a priest ...

LITERARY MISCELLANEA

... by the higher animals-should rob and spoil, defend their homes, be jealous, revengeful, aud disputative, and should war in armies-yet such is the case Thus bees, if the meat of one hive be spent, will assail their next neigh- bours, w~ih intent to rob ...

POEMS FOR THE MASSES

... is that to our stand(ing army of a million and a quarter paupers, mnintained at a cost of ten or twelve millions annuallyP For this monstrous evil and dis- ?? we must fied a remedy, or make it. The land- lords' tax oil the land in tie forum of rent amounts ...

THE HUNGER-FIEND

... congregation o7a the beauty of rirtue, was surprised to be informed of an old woman, who expressed herself highly pleased with his sermon, that her daughter was the most virtaous woman in the parith, for ' that week She Jhad spun sax spindles of yarn,' , I ...

Without the Limelight

... time, but she didn't let the woman see her. ?? had her cry while her land- lady was upstairs seeing. to her bed. The bedohamber wee a miserable, ill- furnished ecpboard of a place, and smelt musty and niamp. -The woman left the candle,-said good-night ...

From the Christmas Bookshelf

... in the English Army, those desiring a soldier's life being forced to seek it in foreign countries. The hero is a young officer in the Irish Brigade, which for many years after the siege of Limerick formed the backbone of the French Army. Ile goes through ...

Published: Saturday 24 November 1900
Newspaper: Graphic
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1393 | Page: 23 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture