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Scotland

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Grampian, Scotland

Access Type

188

Type

188

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POETRY

... own grace and purity. E Not always does it fare so well t Where teinpe-tA4 rge ar d riot; t Yet even there the little bell Speaks ont-'Tsvill soon be quiet ! c Though elsedls look black and pour down rain, y Tbe sunsineii brighter Comes 1Igain. d And ...

LITERATURE

... hut thes people of thso North are not of ha des thin impressible order, and, thank Providence, they are, Si enl- generally speaking, nanch too healthy to shew any pa-eclvilty Wi t~he to preternatural ecstacy, one of the preconditions of which Bi for seams ...

LITERATURE

... nurse. It treats cisiefly of the smaller yee details of ties sick rooles, a knowledge ofwihte y I- elan cannot, generally speaking, leave behind, and to which lee cannot attend. It does not go boyond ties simple aids of nature, and yet is sulch as provides ...

LITERATURE

... authors. Theo author is honest and out' a, qpoien; he does net clothe his thoughts In flue drapery, hut 4t what is better, be speaks the plaits trt, iccordingstofhis perception of it, in a direct way; the style, inedso Te racy and picturesque. -C di Goedi ...

LITERATURE

... lively illustrations, and moral lessons, lend, andi is well worth perusal. Of The Battle-fields of 1859 ed we need not speak. Mr Collier's. Slakespere is subjected to Tt whic alarp criticism in the third article, after which we have paoe litical. and ...

POETRY

... Adaen Smith, John Stuart Mill, Molesworth, &c., and puts n them in a readable aiid popular way. Mr Hollingshead's f bold speaking, graphic delincation, and dedication to Mr Bright, ought to call forth a stinger from the Satirday Re- ricw, and I hope it ...

LITERATURE

... influence upon all readers of our lauiguage VI for generations to come. The ricihnoss and fSnhuss,' then, of Gi whicll uve speak, may be oxpected to communicate a certal tin vividness to the conceptions ordinarilyfound among Eungloshmion dis sbonit their ...

ROYAL ACADEMY EXHIBITION

... the trees, But there is, we ap'-a' ch prehend, a little, anachronism in this blending of sprinih ye, l and sunmmer,'aot'to'speak of the haibit of hedges Gal- a ins t ivating the less elegant members of the: vegetesb1lb- to 'world nuder their shelter. There ...

LITERATURE

... also repeteted alocng with it), in wvhicle ties cecquent secd picilant~lropfde Author speaks of results as I reSgards lets osse 11school. In tie is notice we eshall speak of| the new esaatter onely.^ With regard to tico organzisation oS tide mnost valuable ...

FASHIONS FOR JUNE

... 515 of deference to its wiebse, the Christian patriot, Aleseandro ii 50 Gavazzi, felt it his duty to refrain from public speaking. g ig But now that the city of the Arno is happily secured to the v ?5 Italian monarch, whcss constitutional sceptre Gavacci ...

LITERATURE

... years, while looking on 's ties maim countenance and speaking lips fromu which the inform- leg spirit bed just fled,- there lies one who ceever uttered a I nieharsh weed, en wemeted fl kind avord to Speak to high or bayv, rich Dvoor poor, among tile pcsple ...

LITERATURE

... -l noess and originality thean one would have been led to expect frome tiec meodest claims made in the preface. Generally speaking, we cannot but agree wills the critical courlusiene at whejich Dr Browvn arrives; and, if we were at all ineclieeed to differ ...