Refine Search

Countries

Scotland

Place

Glasgow, Lanarkshire, Scotland

Access Type

48

Type

48

Public Tags

LITERATURE

... oveer its sad condition. .) . What a lifuld tragedy queen it is,' thought Kenneath to o himself as his sister finished speaking,' it appearing to him InE that all this was simply a~piece of first-rate noting upon her air part Uon m sal' ow, shuktnever ...

THE AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF MARY GRANVILLE.*

... Pendarves became so- t qliainted with the accomplishedDr. Delanya.Sbo only alludes E to.himincidentally in her letters; bat speaks in warm terms I of another Dobtdr'--Deah Swift. * ?? S Swift handsomely-,declared- that after -watching her long and narrowly ...

LITERATURE

... had recoarse to the perilous ereatioa't - Well- nigh 'thirtyyears have now rolled over myihead viao6 the. crisis of 1832- I speak we'erycalmly on this, as on every poli- tical question whatever;' and I cannot, with any cea0fidenne, : apeworit inthe afflrmasive ...

LITERATURE

... It nithaebeen supposed that'snch imaprovemenats Would ihh, 1.v raised'the musket in the estimation of soldiers, and so h speak disparagingly of it as compared with the bayonet, ~and the celebrated words of the present Emperor of the French 'b thave ...

LITERATURE

... PFTI-RATVRE,. CEB hAnxAD1A+ si G>UIDE London: Edward Stan- ford,. 1860. gu ey one ~wbo meditate pitching his tent, or, to speak snore literally, erecting bis Iebanty, in Canada West, we ordiallye coymend the 53bove-mentioned neat little volume. it Is ...

THE LORD-ADVOCATE ON THE REVIVAL OF SACRED MUSIC

... organ, or kiet o' whistles, as it has been called, is something that ought not to be introduced into religious worship. Now,. speaking for myself, as a Presbyterian, I think we are hardly done jutice to in the matter. We do not look upon the organ with anything ...

PRIVATE DIARY OF SIR ROBERT WILSON.*

... hirm remain three hours-solely to prove that he si iadversity more than the homage he required in litv. Cn another occasion, speaking of the French, ile the Countess A. Poteski, ' I have them, Madame, !ria my pocket; I can do with them as I will, only by ...

LITERATURE

... ? as truly as beautifulY said, Flienea ,i) puit c-c'o, Scop- 2raumgu tyr nnO. The ingenious author has here, if we may so speak, copiously and grapbically dramatized the youthful career of Benjamin Franklin taking for his textbook the autoblograpby of ...

LITERATURE

... often as I shouldnsa ha'e been, and as, wi' God's help, I never, never will be again a! Oh 1 . exclaimed Jeanie. Let mre speak, said William; to think, Jeanie,-here he struggled as if something was achoking bim,--to think that for whisky I might ...

LITERATURE

... but we do not 'hel bive that -the ?? has-auxicceoded -in dooing so in this trulyplausble volume, hwhjeh, typographically speaking, is gob up in M *E Aston,& - Pouglas'& best style , and . xtends to' up ud~f4Dpwages. -4 pae.-' .: Tiaattim women of the ...

LITERATURE

... progress manyindividual minds take part. - Often, where a mannmost seems to discover, he, in truth, haslbut been theaswifteet to speak, and thus the merit of invention: is almost invariably contented. Yet, to the extent we have indicated, there is no cavil among ...

DOMESTIC ANNALS OF SCOTLAND.*

... the meeting, Peden observed a raven come ?? itself,. to appearance, on a pirticeularperfle'a head, who presnt$ly, began to speak with 'great vehemence.7-I From one man's 'e . the 'ap rance pissed to anothts, andlthence to:athird.,; Peden told the' .man ...