Refine Search

Countries

Scotland

Counties

Aberdeenshire, Scotland

Access Type

2,024

Type

2,012
7
5

Public Tags

THE BUILDING FOR THE EXHIBITION OF 1851

... the'Falk- nlland I.slands f ?? d ref r& hbnt, in peteenhe to. the L, Iports in the Brazils, generally resorted to. Capt. Maxwell speaks from experience, havifngitfii .ommand of HsM.S the Dijdo'just, returned from! NcWZ ?? the. ihovii routo the ~~~sdobiadeth~~~ ...

ANNUAL EXHIBTION OF THE ROYAL NORTHERN AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY

... believe there was but one opinion, that the exhibition was in every way most excel- lont and creditable. Bat we proceed to speak somewhat more particularly. CAtTTLE. In this department-of course the most prominent of the show-the visitor had first presented ...

LITERATURE

... propounded by these men- are not to be at all confounded with the knowledge upon which they are based For our own part, we wish to speak humbly of the result of wide and philosophical generalisa- tions upon so vast a field of scientific research as that on which ...

MR. MACREADY'S READINGS OF SHAKESPEARE

... man of thought. i He is better suited for Macbeth, Coriolantes, or Richard the Third, than the melancholy-mincded Dane. We speak compa. ratively of course-poiliting out in what he excels, not in what he comas eshort; for ill his reading he left little ...

LITERATURE

... deep obligatious by the publication of this admirable volume. TuMe fact of this t being already the ninth edition of the work speaks Moro powrerfally than anything we could say in its fdvour. We deem it our duty, however, to state that, besides the perspicuous ...

ROYAL ITALIAN OPERA, COVENT GARDEN

... being so seldom repeated. Of the reappearance of Madame Viardot, in her original part of idues, in the Prophletc, we can only speak iu the language of eulogy; the impassioned tones of maternal grief still ring in mor ears, and the intensity of' her terro- ...

LITERATURE

... in the Royal Naval Schools of Greenwich Hospital, adoptsa itmotto from Dr Arnold, in which that eminent Christian scholar, speaking of what he means by a real and lively knowledge of Geography, says it is that which brings the whole charaterr of a eountry ...

ROBERT BURNS, ELDEST SON OF THE POET

... a memory in- comparably retentive. He was eleven years of age when his father died. Of him and his works and character he speaks with tbe greatest reverence, never naming him except as 'the bard,' or 'the poet.' The only physieal infirmity under which ...

LITERATURE

... pieSuIROd, is acquainted with the formni- dabrle difficuilties which have to be encountered befor-e a person omeons to be able to speak and writs the English language with propi'iCtcy; scul we dareo say most peopln loolt back on their study or ranmmair uvithout ...

POETRY

... see them more. A tear stands in tho father's eye- The mother beaves affection's sigh- Silent tho sistcrs weep- The brothers speak ofjoyvs to come, And independence not at home, To cheier him o'er the deop. He sighs and bids them all farewell, While fiancy ...

LITERATURE

... Hly est ad te rlaioninwhich the Clergy stand towrdsthepeole s te epostor ?? Word. On the Bomnisngteneniesof hepreen ?? Smith speaks in the ollwin laguae, hic isalie caraterised by christian And what are some of the consequences which, notemnwarrentsbly ...

LITERATURE

... his capacious affections. Tile story of the ivalship of the ugncle and the nephow is very amusing. The English bhue- beard speaks with the selfish petulance of a spoiled child, when be finds the suit of the Scottish monarch prefarred. Within a month of ...