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Leeds Mercury

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Yorkshire and the Humber, England

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57

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57

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Leeds Mercury

LITERATURE

... the strange rock-shapes, and grand and wonderful, but often cold and desolate, scenes of this coast of the far north; nor speak of the Fin who shares with the Norman the produce of its bsoil and sea; nor of the aboriginal Lap who roams its snowy solitudes ...

LITERATURE

... this the man assented, addinlg, I'You are an )ingllshiman, and I cars trust year wnrd; and now listeni, adjudge u-hetser I1 speak truly. Yen propose to veili the m~ines ait -, on the Slth of this mionth., You have engaged louppo ?? vettura, ,arid horses ...

LITERATURE

... Dickens, Profossor Airoy, acd Thomas Wright, MA., F.S A. T31oOI;ES's DIyNNERS.-Of the dinners at Brookes's Mr. Timibs does not speak at all. Very pleasant dinuers they were it the admocistration of the Dake of elvilington inc 1828 and 1829, wheu Brookes's ...

SIGNOR ARDITI'S CONCERT

... and Mario, and eves though with- out the voices which have made their names famous. It is long since the tone adopted in speaking of them was the patronising and sympathetic, and it need scarcely be said that as time runs on that tone is more and more ...

LITERATURE

... Probably there is no equal area in the world upon which so many geological strata are exhibited at the rurfaceas in England. Speaking with reference to the general industry of the country rathher than with scientific minuteness, it may be said that metal ...

LITERATURE

... is quite oistlict from the judgment, ''This is ritht. It i9 not of Moierality or even religion that the wild Itovers first speak to a ceilcd of perfect sanity; but they are living, they aro lItakltifll, aid we bow over them wvith a joy, a yearnincg, ? ...

LITERATURE

... Cabisiet speak in the Lords with authority nud leu er. They are not administrators with a power to a tight to speech-clerks (as is sometimes suggested) brought tl'tnv to lecture a House, but not to vote in it; they ate the equals of those they speak to; they ...

LITERATURE

... streets in the Egyptian towns and large I vi lleges, he began to pereonate the character Of IL banker,I or, niore properly speaking, the money-chaniger. The peculiar manner in which lie so inimitably set, as it were, his, features to represenit those of ...

LITERATURE

... I have turned the key ! Enter, stranlger, Whlio art come to sup with me! Opening wide the door He came; But I could not speak his name; In the guest-chair took his place, IBut I could not ?? his face; Whou mv cheerful fire was beaming, When my little ...

LITERATURE

... S called( to Oecicupy xii inilitirtalit sibiere ris the shepherd unit bishsoli of innilly fjiidr-eds of souls. As we thus speak, scores of r'iil seem' ,Iiq liislefore uts, of whomn we knew sufficient to be able t'sily they Owe their turesent lionounible ...

LITERATURE

... period. N~or was thle great lexico- grc: 1515r a good stery-teller. Iii thle IiRiamsler,'' ums arid wacuums lire made to speak~ language aS fimi a cd as ilinpro- liable as the Speeches which. the wvorthy sloctor prescribed ter Isis 'rory lavousirils ...

LITERATURE

... makes it hope- less, to look for any trace of that passionate sens of power 'nd delight in gitat outer things of which we.speak here. Among latermen, Coleridge and Keats used nature maionly as a stimulant or a sedative; Wordsworth as a veget able fit ...