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Scotland

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Glasgow, Lanarkshire, Scotland

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4,164

Type

4,164

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POPULAR ENTERTAINMENTS

... admirable, and performed so ex- ul -ceedingly well, that lie must be an ill-natured critic who would n find fault with it. To speak of the scenery and properties, w which are the first to attract attention, we must say that every- to thing which could give ...

POPULAR ENTERTAINMENTS

... life by their action and their elocutian the wondrous beings the bard has made immortal as himself, are allowed to move and speak before empty benches. Why is it so? Perhaps because it is a theatrical performance. But no, we do not think that that is the ...

POPULAR ENTERTAINMENTS

... life by their action and their elocution the wondrous beitigs the bard has made immortal as hiincif, are allowed to move and speak before empty benches. Why is it so? Perhaps because it is it theatrical perforiane. But tio, we tio not think that thtet is ...

LITERATURE

... -and complainiiig voice, whichl at its first ,astonishes oiie. 'T'lis poor sex, oppressed for so many it, centuries, only speaks iii lamentation. All the family, ?? little children, ehio ran away at ourI is approach, were of remarkable beauty, in spite ...

JOHN BULL TO JONATHAN

... Iini;'d hand and heart-link'd pocket, too, to f Wrles Jlonathan goos bankrlupt, John may think about his (locket. Tile ultiuils speak: W-Ill President or Prelllier stormls or truckles, s Thc lie tiat is 11n1(1s are freo, to conle down on either's kouckles. ...

LITERATURE

... Ilsteitonber ?? warms- isig-1 I have spoikeni, asid ye have not heard ; I Isave called, reand ye have inot nsttcsered ; whets ye speak I trill usot hear rge Whest ye call I wvill not amiswer. I wvill laughs at your calamity, ut, andstoc -ei- yu fear comehh.'' ...

LITERATURE

... no longer. ng t' What has happened ? asked she. ?? Mother, father, !P. brother, Lello, what is the matter with you all ? Speak, I be- .aseech you I I shall have courage; answer cue, meamma, I be- o r seen thieel Ah l you will kill sue l For pity's sake ...

LITERATURE

... there is no essential reason why they should be read together. Of the writings of SENEX it is not necessary that we should speak at length.- We are en- titled to assume that our readers are pretty well acquainted with them, as our venerable friend has ...

LITERATURE

... Engravings. W. & R. Chambers, London and Edinburgh; H. Campbell, Glasgow. As four parts of this work are now before 'us, ve can speak more confidently regarding it than we were able to do when we foreshadowed its plan some months since from the perusal of the ...

LITERATURE

... interfere with digestion. Spirits.-Of these, as articles of diet, under the forms of gin, brandy, rum, &c., we unhesitatingly speak in the strongest terms of conidennation. There is no valid excuse for the con- stant use of raw spirits by those who, requiring ...

HEINE'S RICTURES OF TRAVEL

... To-night there's a ball in the churchyard, So come-l will dance with thee therel A spall came over the maiden, She could neither speak nor stay ! So she followed the Forin-whicl, singing And fiddling, went dancing away. Ficddling, and dancing, and hopping, And ...

JACOB HOMNIUM'S HOSS

... Is a mellitary beak, He knows Ino more of Lor Than praps ha does of Greek, And prowides hisself a deputy Because he cannot speak. Four counsel in this Court- Misnamed of JUstice-sits These lawyers owes their places to Their mollay, not their wits; And ...