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Countries

Scotland

Place

Glasgow, Lanarkshire, Scotland

Access Type

28

Type

28

Public Tags

OPENING OF THE SCOTTISH EXHIBITION

... ot rust dhescribe thle gallery soil elartmenits below, which have us, baen done iii thle repel-I, aiid thle works ill which speak foir at th ele hilt I hope ttertf this briaf description of tilie i rirrarugoeciut will eiiable you uo lires-ot thle vorks ...

LITERATURE

... took me and we dressed me; I walked about just as I do with these clothes, aul stood still, sat down. They said to use, ' Speak, say this, and rei sty that.' As to mes, what did I care for that? I spoke just ha right on. Oiice I represented a blind man-eb ...

BATH STREET EXHIBITION OF ARTS AND MANUFACTURES

... than n- the time occupied in reading what we have written. It is im- rts possible on one visit to enter into detail; but we speak sincerely ey when we say that no one will grudge. the time spent, even ug though many days were devoted to a careful examinationof ...

LITERATURE

... displayed an amount of moral heroism quite equal to that of their south- ern sisters. Helen Stark, after bidding farewell and speaking words of encouragement to a tenderly beloved husband, who was himself on the way to the scaffold, tore her infant' from her ...

BATH STREET EXHIBITION

... nt writes on Wednesday even- I am credibly informed that Official despatches have been I received from the Crimea, which speak in a more positive man- I ner than such eommunications have. hitherto done of the date fixed for the I assault.' From the 5th ...

TO AN ITALIAN BEGGAR-BOY

... of woman born- Did human mother's breast Nourish thee, thing forlorn? Hath any love carest Thine infant cheek; Didst ever speak, Or hear, the name of father blest? No, no, it cannot be I Thou art the birth of Want- Thy sire was Misery, Thy mother Famrine ...

ANCIENT SCOTTISH POETRY

... italulgeil 'Iitt suche al , ' tinsmwlatemm, by wtay or obuiw- dl ing liow uncomfrortable was Ilie state of thinigs, the hinet Speaks tlt of uouicy befig turned into gaill. But When cthe conhusecd manl gets thils length, lie seents to forget for wlsoisi hto ...

LITERATURE

... couic round with inc and tell me what is in eyery one of these boxes. A capital device, I said,; ' childreniand fools speak truth. He sunlied in reply ; arrd then corenonced his tour with the child, who replied to his mock investigation. ,I Well ...

LITERATURE

... has been secured by the sterling merits of the book alone, for it does not belong to the class termed ?? popular ; but it speaks well for the sound thinking, and sound reading qualities of the age, that Dr. M'Cosh's M Method of Divine Government is ...

LITERATURE

... volume, that no form of spelling, according to English pronunciation, will ever enable any one to speak the French language correctly. The proper method of speaking French would be much beter and more satisfactorily acquired by a few short lessons from the ...

LITERATURE

... Acton. Dedicated to the Young Housekeepers of England. London: Longman, Brown, Green & Longnans. BEFonn trusting ourselves to speak on a subject regarding which we know extremely little, we placed this book in the hands of an intelligent atil experienced ...

LITERATURE

... Drama is wisely preserved as the great minstrel wrote it-unabridged, unextended. Then we have C of recent compositions, so to speak, Drawing and Engraving l by Mr. W. 11. Lizars; Electricity by Sir David Brewster; Emigration by Mr. J. RA. M'Culloch; Distillation ...