Word: relling
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...coming men in England?" by saying that there seems to be no coming man in the world of poetry, no future Disraeli or Gladstone in politics, but that such as they are the "most coming" are Balfour, Moriey, Sir William Harcourt, perhaps Labouchere and probably Bradlaugh. Max O'Rell's paper on Lively Journalism is much more "lively" than thoughtful. Its views are conspicuously superficial. "Family life among the Mormons" by one of the fifty-six children of Brigham Young is just about what might be expected from its origin, being both weak, unveracious and silly. Barnum the showman, tells...
...Rell's "Jonathan and His Continent...
...Rell's "Jonathan and His Continent...
...Rell's "Jonathan and His Continent...
...watch some of these veterans limping out of a furious "maul," or rolling on the muddy turf, would give a stranger, no doubt, a high opinion of the vivacity and pluck of our countrymen ; but to one of philosophical bent-such a one, for example, as Mr. Max O'Rell (who has indeed branded the game as "fit only for savages")-the spectacle might also have a ludicrous side. He might feel inclined to exclaim with the poet...