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Daily News (London)

LITERATURE

... near the vicinity of Cape Walker ; secondly from thence t h south-west towards Behring Straits. Thirdly, if arrested by ice or land in that direction, and Wellington Channel was seen in passing it to be open and clear of ice, the alternative was given either ...

The [ill] Drama

... trial P The question in its ultimate reaches is still wider. Is the Army to rule France, or is France to rule the Army ? In esrci now issue as it arises, this is the real point. Thlo Army has judged, nud, as it is sometimes willing to admit for argu- ment's ...

MAN AND HIS BROTHER

... shriek, N On coalpit echoes borne,- And starving Woman's hollow cheek n- In city streets forlorn,- d And mean oppression's heavy hand P On patient merit's head,- ir Ask everywhere throughout the land, .1 -Whither has Mercy fled? 2i Yet is there comfort: ...

LITERATURE

... Southamspton. She de- tects the difference in the discipline of the two armies with the eye of as soldier. She points oust how atd- mirable is.the social constitution of the French army 'when compared with ours, and is indignantly eloquent utpon the coodition ...

LITERATURE

... a minute afterwarils a boatl~ad o the 7rh Fusileers landed. It was then 20 minutes to 10 Sao. Ey 10 *,'clock the French had upwards of 6,000 men landed, and we about 70! Oar being so slow in landing wa, entirplv the taolt of Admiral Dundes. He has been ...

LITERATURE

... are to be consequent upon the ir progress of woman. He denies that there is any lt natural equality; and he cannot understand an arti- 1I ficial equality. But he by no means narrows the le mission of woman by these denials. He seeks in the teaching of ...

LITERARY NOTES

... Switzerland is described. Messrs. Putnam will publish this spring Colonel William H. Powell's History of the Fifth Army Corps (Army of the Potomac), being a record of operations during the Civil War in the United States, with a map and illus- trations ...

GRAND VOLUNTEER BALL AT THE AGRICULTURAL HALL

... principal table; and after supper the healths of the Queen, the Prince and Princess of Wales and the rest of the Royal Family, the Army, Navy, and Volunteers, and of the Lord Mayor and Corporation of the City of London, were proposed and duly honoured. After ...

LITERATURE

... fashions of our English intellect, as expressed by literature. She was not only the woman of letters of the last century, carried far forward into our own -she was not only the woman of flishion who was familiar with the gaieties of life before the fair daughters ...

SOME NEW NOVELS

... wroughlt~by nature upon fl the burnt and dried-ue soil front which nothing I beautiful seemed possible to come, turning the t land into a surprising loveliness. lirst the ' wysterious, almost imperceptible change before the ?? fall. t Then a luxuriance of ...

LITERATURE

... instance, Civ oa- take the whole account of Miss Hobson in the early the ed, part of the Newcomes. She is a serious woman, and em a woman of business-shrewd at once, and pietistic to Every detail of the life in which such a person would firsE be placed ...

LITERATURE

... sensuous greatly predominates over the moral and intellectual, a determined will which has never been disciplined, and a French woman of experience to excite such a character, will sufficiently account for any possible crime. The poetic justice of the author ...