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Place

Glasgow, Lanarkshire, Scotland

Access Type

533

Type

533

Public Tags

SINGULAR STORY

... Orleans. The letters are addressed Dear Julia and Children. The first ones speak of having sent her money, with some doubt in one case whether it was honestly ?? The late ones speak of want, not having been plt sickness, &o., and at least intimate a request ...

LITERATURE

... forms cannot be identified with the direct energies of an all-pervading willit is uuphiloso. pshical, the author submits, to speak as if the forces of nature were separate from the power of the Creator. To discover the cause is not to exclude thelidea of ...

LIBERTY OF ATTITUDE

... not be poosed, ' tor Le Fevre-I shall put it in this form .attachment to th soiU. People speak of love of the country, but.we find that many of those who speak of love of the country prefer the city. The. encouragements which we receive comes from the ...

LITERATURE

... constitute a gentleman. The Mam in the Club Window treats his subject in a peculiarly piquant style, occasionally inclined to speak of - the habits of good society, not as they are actually received, but as they ought to be, according to his particular notion; ...

THE DANISH SOLDIER'S SONG

... stood before. Who but will give his life To drive back foes that seek Destruction to our banner, And tongue which freemen speak. Now, if I'm not returning To friends that weep and pray, King Christian will comfort them, And this is what he'll say:- He ...

THE LATE REV. DR. ROBERTSON

... ofp~talents great attainments a terling quali. ties itle ig nlot the tiume, neither is this tbe place, to z jio o bese. ')To speak of him in the lan- to d snce'i would be opposed to the whole Sgutr i life which was pre-eminently one of spiiet bltsiv power ...

NOTES ON THE EXHIBITION

... lih, Is put as chairmen, against te rule as it was explained to the jurors8 Re sepaks to 1nguglfmen for an hour, and they speak In Frenoh to him, although some present do not understand the langusge, and II1 ackcowledged that the langu ge to the jury ...

THE BOBBY'S LAMENT

... thiestme of day. 3 hto then, in your mext, a course you will have fixed Iach mistrose and maid ought in duty to pursue, yor rs speaking quite coreotlyi when Isay. tho'it' Indirctly, Zrbat mistress, maid, and Bobby are all tangled iu the olue,: 111 say no more ...

LITERATURE

... ourselves to the significant fact that these are, without ani exceptlon, the Gaelic-speaking communities. We do-not me an op to say that if these people were taught to speak English in-. r stead of Gaelic, thc'ould civilise them, but it would certainly da ...

LITERATURE

... receive it at the present day, and In which alone it can effect the redemption and conver. donof theireculs. Thereviewerthus speaks of the author'sd plan- It ls not his intention to begin bydiscusaingmlracles or the trustworthiness of the Gospels in detail ...

FRACAS AT THE DUBLIN EXHIBITION

... complaints have frtquently been made of a want of courtesy on .the part of Mr. Iselin. Of the officials generally we can speak in no terms but those of praise; they bad an arduous duty to perform, and they have done it well, and above all they have avoided ...

THE LONDON THEATRES

... employed when the eoliloquiser was sup- posed to be in that highly wrought state of emotion-, in ?? people do really sometimes speak their thoughts aloudwith no one to hear them. But ith, the Londton pliymaker of to-day the soliloquy is the one grand device ...