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HEYWOOD MECHANICS' INSTITUTION

... that Dccc tholugh some had not fully answered the expectations which a tot, had been'held respecting them', yet, generally speaking, 8,491 thecy had worked out a most important change in the' Ao chwarctr of tho population. They were to be regdrded -Amer ...

Selections

... 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 ...

CONCERTS FOR THE PEOPLE—THE ELIJAH

... sceue whlere the child is rnised fron2 the dead--the vonih oil the I mounitain-the call uponr Israel to hear wliat the Lord speake'thor the rushing by of the elements, followed by the still -small voicee.' To each of these, as to other pas- sages we night ...

LITERARY EXAMINER AND TIMES

... tii 1rui f igf~ob he mbonk. a pcrtore,,by the ao ierc ?? I aa served, pipes warte Smoked en0ovrainidlt.i, ~th the hoc~s speaking a lifttl Piiisitisefadtoohr to Englishisan presens I - aftrad'l ndtat, uvbeihad-' ?? nie ce~ved'p. rt of ?? education itt ...

OPENING OF THE SALFORD BOROUGH MUSEUM AND LIBRARY

... proposed a vote~ofihankseto the hlaoua Owine ?? knew their ?? bud beien ot the'rmost onerousdscitnenhvntttraeaoioftecii- teo ?? speak with ?? fidleue ats to thea able - ivieauiaet f~~irplacise.) ment ihir.A1 ilnise seconded thie islotion. tcaaurnistauces iis ...

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

... 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 ...

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

... 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 ...

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 ...

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 ...