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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 ...

Literature

... as a-relation in which one substance is :regnrded as operating opun another. This operating substance or cause is what we speak of as mind. It is conceived as possessing and unifving emotion, intelligence, and will. Our idea of cause, therefore, really ...

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 ...

LITERATURE

... Minlistry from the outset, especially ol tice a q Foroigu enlistment act. A secoixd pap-er, viz., Peace and Patriot. 18tl ism, speaks in the same key ; but the writer, in enthusiastic ilg admiration of the opposition, tells us that, though turned out I of ...

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 ...

THE OPERA

... which are less easily stirred into activity than are those to which the passionate sentiment of Italian music immediately speaks. Its harmonies are often original and striking, full of dine shading and contrast, hue they require the car of the tutored ...

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 ...

Literature

... present hi another extract, in order to establish our charge:- p Her mother told her not to look at Towards strangers, nor to speak too loud L To her sister-semnstresm, until am She knew them well-to rise betimes- fo To dress quite plain-to lace her shoes ...

THE OPERA

... mecanical execu- 1 ion, vxhich was good, we could scarcely hazard an opi. nion upon this gentieman's musical genius. We can speak, however, with perfect confidence of the ability of Herr Matnns (M1r NMackenzie's coadjutor in the orchestra) as a violinist ...

Literature

... be met with in the periodical press, while the literary details are classified and collected with a tact and ability which speak much for the m.¶nageneiit. Should this new enudidate for public fa- ! sour continue to be claracterised bv the satne spirit ...