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... he has heard an hour or so aeo from Vienna of a great victory just gaiued by the Turks. \ffT are witness to a series of conversa- tions carried on with all corners of the island, and be- tvween the metropolis of the world and every capital of northern ...

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... adopts towards ladies The weak and sichly empress he treats with compasionate aflection: - we can find no better word. When from indisposition she is confined to her apartment, he frequently visits her there; and the newspapers, whish are always loud in ...

Published: Sunday 14 May 1854
Newspaper: Lloyd's Weekly Newspaper
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1644 | Page: 8 | Tags: News 

THE SCRAP-BOOK COLUMN

... qulibble, or a comnmon.place resert, which tbe green rootn passes over in deserved silense, wlll frequently convulse the public from pit to gallery.-Shiiriey, Brook's Ashpen Uonurt. KsrrBIn Wlre AbBB&ISaaS.-Peygamy is only re. stricted by the bovine riches ...

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... testimony she thus bore over the corpse of her dead son to his opinions while living, drew from these who stood nearest a cry of admiration, wshich spread rapidly from mouth to mouth through the crowd; the enthusiasm for the beautiful had seized upon them ...

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... ! He has generally no sentiment of re- speet for form, and will spare nothing. He is bor suspicious ; and if he kears the world admiring any. thing, forthwith hecanclides that it muit he humbay¢ He has no regard to the heaps of honour gathered round ...

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... TEO SCRAP-BOOK COLU[N. TuvnxE'5 MIsneiss.-At another time he was very near giving B dinner, but fate ordained it otherwise, as the sequel will show. Turner had received many civilitm, from Mdr. Thompson, of Daddingstone, and when in Edin. burgh had ...

Published: Sunday 08 January 1854
Newspaper: Lloyd's Weekly Newspaper
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1694 | Page: 8 | Tags: News 

THE SCRAP-BOOK COLUMN

... his bed, routed which was coiled a rope of camol's hairM apology for tha turban. His inner garsaents were coM. pletel, hid from ?? view by a most Mlthy burneoss (I dcoa), of which the strength of the material hlid sarpea& ed the strength of the colour ...

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... independent and great lord, he is thankful for the services of the smallest persons; Rousseau, on the contrary, needs help from everybody, and you cannot be of use to himl, buat forthwith he sets himself to hate you. He is, on the whole, not so good as ...

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... loneness Hooded hearts grow blind i Fullof kindness tingling, Soul ie shat from soul, When they might be mingling Ta one kindred whole I There's no dearth of kindnes Thu' it be unspoken, From the heart it hbildeth Rainbow-ismlles Ln token- That there be none ...

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... Every nerve and muscle of' both horses and riders isstretched to the utmost tension-the former' from sheer instinct to gain the victory, the latter from a spirit of almost matehless- daringmirthfulness; and excitements Nowcoines along' a party of men ...

Published: Sunday 01 October 1854
Newspaper: Lloyd's Weekly Newspaper
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1640 | Page: 8 | Tags: News 

THE SCRAP-BOOK COLUMN

... the noise of the fianes drowns that of tbe torrents, and as tbegreat stem. joints burst, from the expansion of the coafined air, the report is as that of a salvo from a park ot artillery. At Doujling the blaze is visible,- and the deadened report of the ...

THE SCRAP-BOOK COLUMN

... tory of the Anglo Saxons. This gentleman, who re. ceived three hundred a year from government as a literary pension, wrote the third veonme of his Sacred Histor of the World upon paper which did not cost him a faos thing. The copy consited of torn and ...