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Scotland

Place

Glasgow, Lanarkshire, Scotland

Access Type

19

Type

19

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LITERATURE

... Sider this volitie as tuly A Book of Beauty. O tito character of the comupasitions in the volume, we have not spaie to speak at length, but *ve mt^y state that it contains tweuu v- d three pieces of music, songs, duets, waltzes, polkas, and quil- Idrilles ...

MISCELLANEOUS

... thie thientae of I thuh} formlleC siruigg ?? A circfutrcs iii C'ali- .3.1canufactoi' of )t1h pie Sugor by Indians.-We inre speaking of tle, remnote past, and of an encamtnpment of Ottawa Indimns, in one of the inaple fores~ts skirting the western sltorc ...

LEAVES FROM THE NOTE-BOOK OF A NATURALIST

... coimforts. Each I)f thelin is intle :t etltefnt ofal)y capricious latitilor at d bott sitail and tortoise, r ?? if they etultd speak, might say wlhat it is a great privilege to be Ite able to say, ' teatit alone ear, turi me out of this house. r (in I ...

FINE ARTS

... siteitia- c1 tin tuit nut to hl jsighy prolituihte one. We havve examittiet this toalp vet-) carefully, and while we hiave to speak in fhtea-ouable (Crnit tof thle arttistic bealuty of its execiltiltt, we I to intist esjtectally recotmndtiu it for its to ...

ON NATIONAL DEFENCE IN ENGLAND.*

... coast is extaetly as isrobable as a udcclar'ations of war-tseitltcr tmore mnor less sot. Mr. Cmmbden, we, recollect, used to speak of such a bstcatmicrimmg expelitiois sss a tihing ji too savage to be apprehtended ;bitt, if Eniglanud ammd Fransce are ...

NEW MUSIC

... likings, and this they do in a most agreeable manner. Mr. Jeffreys has, with much grace and delicacy, made his floral beauties speak in delightful stanzas, and Mr. Glover has wed- ded the poetry to music as simple and sweet as it is appropri- ate to the themes ...

POPULAR ENTERTAINMENTS

... thought of what wve are about to say. M ir. Josh. Silsbec is very off uilnil, very vulgalr, by no ieans t COUic, anidloesiltsl speak intelligibly P.erhaps hisperfittnec5 - givet a true pictit re of the genifine Yankee of a certaini class, if t so, IBeavell ...

LITERATURE

... Vols. l6-I7.-MEMOIRS S OF THE LATE THoMAS 1O1CqaOFT. Written by himself. Is London: Longman & Co. y WE do not require now to speak at length of the singularly in- teresting character of the two works we have named above. They have been some time before the ...

LITERATURE

... merits of B~oswell's account of the great Icajee-of if grapher's tour amnongst the Western Isles, no one will expect , us5 to speak. They are, universally known and acknowledged; bnil le The public will feel much indebted, however, to thle proprie- I if tore ...

LITERATURE

... songs, aid miscellieotus sonigs. There is thus sometlilsig to suit every taste ; mid tiousg students of Scottish song (so to speak;) may regret the absence of certaia favourites, they must remember, at the same time, that so riell a posic has rarely been ...

LITERATURE

... volume of this .le new periodical, which contains parts I, to VI, inclusive, and we, lY at the same timc, chnnot choose but speak in high terms of the n- manner and style in which tihe work is got up. The literary contents are composed of biographical sketches ...

LITERATURE

... whose reason are both wide awake to all that comes before her. Above all, we admire these sketches be- cause Mrs. Jaueson speaks out whatever she thinks, and her thoughts are always generous, charitable, and huniane-in fact Womenanly. We have said that ...