. Ireland in London. revious toor about 1363. The Pictorial World deservesalight notice, inasmuch as it was to its columnsthat Frank Power contributed his clever sketchesand drawings of the Soudan, and a3 the paper inwhich some of RichardDowlings finest essaysand stories , it should besaid, ia native of Clon-mel, and is, even onthe evidence of a hostilecritic, equal to VictorHugo as a word-painterand in the power ofvivid description. Inconcluding our noticeof the present-dayperiodical literature,we cannot omit a slightreference to Mac-millans Magazine, in which Annie KearysCast


. Ireland in London. revious toor about 1363. The Pictorial World deservesalight notice, inasmuch as it was to its columnsthat Frank Power contributed his clever sketchesand drawings of the Soudan, and a3 the paper inwhich some of RichardDowlings finest essaysand stories , it should besaid, ia native of Clon-mel, and is, even onthe evidence of a hostilecritic, equal to VictorHugo as a word-painterand in the power ofvivid description. Inconcluding our noticeof the present-dayperiodical literature,we cannot omit a slightreference to Mac-millans Magazine, in which Annie KearysCastle Daly and other works appeared; theGentlemans Magazine, which has numberedamong it3 most important contributors JamesRoche, Justin MCarthy, and Percy Fitzgerald;and the following weeklies—the WeeklyTimes, to which Dr. R. Shelton Mackenzie (anative of Limerick) wrote for some years, hispseudonym Little John being retained by hissuccessors; the Sunday Times, of which J. was long the dramatic critic; and the. T. P. 0 CONNOR. Weekly Dispatch, wherein soma ot RichanIDowlings most characteristic articles, &c., ap-peared, and whose Paris correspondent i3 , already introduced into this chapter. There are a number of remarkable Irish men andwomen who might have been referred to in con-nection with certain of the magazines andperiodicals, but whom we prefer to deal withseparately. Such are Stopford A. Brooke, theeminent critic and poet; Richard Barry OBrien,the learned historic writer; Mrs. Cashel Hoey (anative of Dublin county), Mrs. Charlotte Riddellnee at Carrickfergus), Mrs. BeatriceM. Croker, Elizabeth Owens Blackburne Casey (anative of county Meath, better known as Ellen ), May Crommelin, Alice Corkran,Letitia MClintock, and several other femalenovelists of equal power and fame; A. H. Bullen,the greatest living authority perhaps on the earlyElizabethan poets, and a son of George Bullen,the head of the Printed Book Department of thaBri


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