Punch, or the London Charivari, Volume 102, February 27, 1892 by Various
page 32 of 39 (82%)
page 32 of 39 (82%)
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much appreciated by all!'"
* * * * * [Illustration: THE WESTMINSTER WAX-WORK SHOW FOR THE SESSION 1892. ROOM 2.] * * * * * OUR BOOKING-OFFICE. In _Tess of the D'Urbevilles_ (published by Messrs. OSGOOD, MCILVAINE & CO.), Mr. THOMAS HARDY has given us a striking work of fiction, bold in design, and elaborate in finish. The characters, with one exception, are as true to life as are his graphic descriptions of nature's own scenery; true that is to the types of such rural life as he professes to represent,--the life led in our Christian country by thousands and thousands of genuine Pagans, superstitious Boeotians, with whom the schoolmaster can do but little, and the parson still less. As to the clergymen who appear in this story, two of them are priggishly academic, a third is a comfortable antiquarian, and the fourth unacquainted with even the A.B.C. of his own pastoral theology. [Illustration: A BRIGHT PARTICULAR STAR IN THE MILKY WAY. Showing how an Angel without wings played on the harp to Milkmaid Tess of the Tubbyveals, who was so proud of her calves.] Since THACKERAY's _Captain Costigan_, and TOM ROBERTSON's dramatic variation of him as _Eccles_ in _Caste_, no more original type of the |
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