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Liverpool, Lancashire, England

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2,156

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... years. Live these fifty years 1 the Bishop roared, with actions made b to suit, t Are you mad, my good Lord Keepsr, thus to speak of King r Canute? r Jan have lived a thousand years, and surobesMajestyjwilldoi't. il 'Adam, Elnoch, Lamerb, Canaan, Mahalecl ...

Literary Extracts

... apparently an invalid, P0] 1t recovering from wounds or sickness. On my aplproaci- ult ot.Ing him, he appeared unwilling to speak or be spoken oer to. Nor is it difficult to explain why a Spaniard, wdi velt moeelg an Englishman on the walls of St Sebastian ...

Selections

... I am not all unlearned; Once thro, mine own doors death did pass; One wont who never hath roturn'd. He will not smile-nor speak to me Once more. Two years his chair is seen Empty before us. That was he Without whose life I had not been. I knew your brother ...

Literary Extracts

... them all prizeabooks a while before, concern- astic ing the old Covenanters in the persecuting times, as if and they were speaking about them. And, bairns, M the I heard Jenny say, asks stood at the door watching !d in them, what wad ye hae dune, think ...

THEATRE ROYAL

... death, when Mrs. Green everal left him. Mrs. Green saw her husband again about half- every past eight o'clock, but did not speak to him, as she et the thought he was asleep. At half-past nine o'clock I so as he was found dead. Dr. Stevenson made a post ...

Literary Extracts

... It is a great mistake to suppose that the best music I d is the most difficultof execution. The very reverse, h generally speaking, is the case. Music of a high e order certainly demands high gifts and attainments it on the part of the performer, But the ...

Literary Extracts

... sat beside him. Perhaps the old man had a consciousness of the joy which filled the heart of his son, for, as he began to speak, his words seemed as if they ware those of an affectionate spirit. He a sate in a corner wrapped in darkness, nobody could ...

Original

... qlitomnc: Curses of nature's Gud and shricks of man's despair I 0 1 Englishmen. 0 ! noble Englishlnan, Thou whose bravo speakings have the power to impart Fresh hop-, fresh courogc, to the Coltie heart. Thou wiso hast tongue to toll and eye to scan, Rest ...

REVIEWS

... into more stirring plary, it being little in the nature of a b hlythe bay to bide quiet, and look at the aky-that I should speak of him so I that is a man with gray hairs upon his head, and a father in the kirk ; but the years ia steal by us fart, and ...

Selections

... thlme of your departure Constaut toils and troubles ran, Till you Ji)nd you've caught a Tartar, And returu home-ifyou can. Speak tot now of small boats cramm'd with Men and fleas, too thick to movo; Nor of sluggish rivers d-d with Fierce mosquitoes in ...

Literary Extracts

... Ima milk, and these madE coalescing into one mass, they for that tenacious, stood elastic, insolublematerial of whichwe are speaking; see il and by no process of science orart hitherto dis- of th covered can they he made to reassue their original was condition ...

Literary Extracts

... no country in Europe worse supplied with e puilio libraries, and scarcely any in which such as do 0 exist are, generally speaking, so fenceed round with ~ restrictions and impediments to free access. Not bi one of the great European capitals presents ...